Google I/O 2022 conference, the company revealed that there are now over three billion active Android devices in the world. That's a lot of potential help when it comes to finding your lost suitcase or camera.
Android already has Google's Find My Device feature, but until recently it was based on your device's most recent known location. Back in December 2022, though, an update meant that it "now supports encrypted last-known-location reports for Android devices, using a new privacy centric framework", and since then an update allowing you to detect unknown trackers that might be used to stalk you has also rolled out.
But when the true Find My Device network launches, it will work with Bluetooth trackers – including the Google AirTag if and when that lands, along with third-party trackers. That means you'll be able to track more than just phones. And as with Apple's system this is all encrypted.
Put all of those pieces together and you potentially have the world's most powerful system for finding lost items or possessions, for Android fans at least. Google's own AirTag-style tracker might not be a technological leap over its Apple rival, but the system it's based on could be both more open and bigger than 'Find My'. Who knows, maybe it'll be powerful enough to compel Apple to release that long-rumored AirTag 2.
We've previously argued that Google's rumored AirTag rival could be an Android moment for Bluetooth trackers, and the evidence suggests it has the potential to be just that. What's less clear is when the tracker and new 'Find My Device network' might launch.
With the arrival of Ultra-wideband connectivity on recent Google Pixel phones, the pieces are coming together for a launch soon, so we might see both in early 2024, or if not then perhaps at Google I/O 2024 (likely in May).
What isn't in doubt is the globe-spanning potential of a Google AirTag with a tracking network that anonymously piggybacks on billions of Android devices. Bluetooth trackers are currently in a fragmented state, with Samsung’s SmartThings Find service only compatible with Galaxy phones and Apple's AirTags being iPhone-only.
Both could be dwarfed by an Android-powered 'Find My Device network', particularly as it's set to be open to third-party manufacturers. So hopefully this service and tracker will both launch soon.
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