Google has announced a big update to Android’s ‘Find My Device’ feature, which will soon help you track valuables using third-party Bluetooth trackers – and also warn you about unwanted nearby Apple AirTags.
Like Apple’s ‘Find My’ network, Google’s “major update” to its existing Find My Device feature will anonymously use billions of Android devices around the world to help you track down lost or stolen items, even when they’re offline.
Google used the example of accidentally leaving your headphones at the gym – when the ‘Find My Device’ update rolls out “later this summer”, you’ll theoretically be able to use other nearby Android devices to find them.
Because Find My Device will soon work with third-party Bluetooth trackers from the likes of Tile and Chipolo, you’ll also be able to use those to keep track of other valuables like your bicycle or suitcase.
Naturally, a tracking network built on billions of Android devices raises some privacy concerns. Google was keen to stress that it’s “taken some time to get this right,” which is something of an understatement – Google’s current ‘Find My Device’ app arrived six years ago at Google I/O 2017 and we’ve heard rumors of a big update for the last two years.
Like Apple’s Find My network, Google says location information is encrypted on the new Find My Device network, which means no one (including Google) can tell where your devices are located. But the bigger headline, which Google teased by announcing its partnership with Apple earlier this month, is the introduction of ‘Unknown tracker alerts’ on Android.
This means your Android phone will tell you if an unrecognized tracking tag is moving with you, and will also help you find it. Thanks to that new standard that Google agreed with Apple, these alerts will work across all phones – including iPhones.
Google says that this new Find My Device experience and ‘Unknown tracker alerts’ will be launching “later this summer”.