Stalkers’ “chilling” use of AirTags spurs class-action suit against Apple
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When Apple released AirTags in 2021, the small electronic tracking devices were touted by top executives as being stalker-proof." Since then, Vice reported a minimum of 150 police cases documenting stalkers using AirTags, and there have already been two severe stalking cases involving AirTags that ended in murder in Ohio and Indiana.
Confronted by police reports and concerns from privacy advocates, Apple released updates in February, claiming that new features would mitigate reported stalking risks. Stalking reports kept coming, though, and it increasingly seemed to victims that Apple had not done enough to adequately secure AirTags. Now, Apple is being sued by two women who claim that the company is still marketing a dangerous" product.
In the complaint filed yesterday in a federal court in California, the women suing Apple say that AirTags have become one of the most dangerous and frightening technologies employed by stalkers." It has become the weapon of choice," they say, because the small size makes the devices hard to detect, the accuracy of Apple's location tracking is unparalleled," and the $29 price is extremely affordable. Victims say that stalkers can effectively track them, and if the device gets deactivated, AirTags are easy to replace at the next opportunity.