I lost a bunch of keys today. It sucks and it’s gonna cost me a lot of money to replace the locks. I want to to add an airtag-like device to my key ring in the future. However I don’t know of any device that works in a similar fashion, either through bluetooth or GPS, that works with Graphene and doesn’t require some kind of privacy invading online subscription.

Do you have any advice on privacy respecting alternatives to airtags?

  • GaumBeist@lemmy.ml
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    7 hours ago

    A few answers say “they aren’t private by design,” but don’t really go into the “why.” There’s the obvious “it’s an electronic tracking device, duh” reason, but there’s also a more nuanced reason:

    Airtags are able to be picked up almost anywhere because they connect to the nearest bluetooth-enabled Apple device, and then send location info across the internet to you. Without this functionality (the ability of any and every Apple device to locate it), they wouldn’t have any way to send their location back to the owner.

    Your best “privacy respecting” alternatives are something that uses meshtastic (and hoping there’s enough repeaters near you), something that uses cellular data and GPS (which is about as privacy-respecting as Airtags are), or just a key finder/beeper (which only works within a small radius)

  • artyom@piefed.social
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    10 hours ago

    Unfortunately having a private option is completely antithetical to the way these things function.

    Your only other option is traditional trackers with GPS/modem and a cell plan.

  • Brkdncr@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    Seeed meshtastic tracker card. The general purpose version uses more battery than I’d like but you can get one that only does tracking or turn off most of features to get more than a few days of life.

    It only works if you have some other meshtastic nodes around, but it doesn’t need to be a lot and it’s getting to be more popular.

  • doodoo_wizard@lemmy.ml
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    9 hours ago

    I’ve answered this question for someone else in the context of tracking luggage. Your use case is also one that the branded apple airtags are best at.

    If you want a big headache project that doesn’t work then try anything but airtags.

    Theres an android find my app and you can run it in a container in graphene.

    If you want a quick, simple, functional solution to your problem then bite the bullet and use airtags.

    You, uh, also maybe shouldn’t be asking for “privacy respecting” electronic tracking devices. The application is fundamentally not private and cannot respect privacy by design.

  • StrawberryPigtails@lemmy.sdf.org
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    10 hours ago

    Not really. There are gps trackers that have a cell modem, used for tracking animals for research, but they are probably very expensive. Both to purchase and operate.

    • comrade_twisty@feddit.org
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      10 hours ago

      Look into tractive a tracker for dogs, it’s quite affordable and made in Austria - which means it respects EU privacy regulations.

      • vinniep@lemmy.world
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        9 hours ago

        Requires a cellular data plan to operate, which is where that expensive operating cost comes in. For a family dog, I could see the expense being worthwhile, but for a number of things (wallet, keys, purse, backpack, etc) that AirTag tracking typically targets as their use case, this would get quite expensive rather quickly.

  • Lyra_Lycan@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    9 hours ago

    What annoys me is that there were thin (~2mm) sticker-type Bluetooth tags about 15 years ago and cost a hell of a lot less (£10 for 3) than fucking AirtagsTile. No battery, just a passive coil that could be found with Bluetooth signal and an app that shows how close it is. Only I can’t find anything on them, so it’s little more than a conspiracy

    • HiddenLayer555@lemmy.ml
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      8 hours ago

      there were thin (~2mm) sticker-type Bluetooth tags […] No battery, just a passive coil that could be found with Bluetooth signal and an app that shows how close it is.

      Sounds kind of like UHF RFID, which are common in places like warehouses and can be done at a distance, but even higher frequency?

      I imagine range was a huge issue. Unless you have an extremely powerful bluetooth tranceiver and a very high gain antenna (i.e. not a phone, a professional radio system), the inverse square law will mean you won’t have enough energy to activate the electronics in the tag after a fairly short distance. Would probably work for finding something in your house though.

    • solrize@lemmy.ml
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      8 hours ago

      Sticker tag sounds like NFC. Certainly a bluetooth tag is possible too. Thing is, Bluetooth range is a few dozen meters tops. Airtag works by turning the entire Iphone population into a giant surveillance network, so if any iphone anywhere detects your airtag, it informs the Apple mothership, which in turn reports to you where your airtag was just seen.

      Only comparable long distance approach I can think of without that is a cellular tracker. Those exist (search: cellular gps pet tracker) but it’s a much bigger box with a subscription plan of its own. Someone else mentioned meshtastic so maybe that’s an alternative in some places, or a LoRA tag instead of a bluetooth tag.

  • Lyra_Lycan@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    9 hours ago

    I’ve found smaller, cheaper alternatives by TrackR and Findr, but a promising yet expensive alternative is Chipolo - supports Apple Find My, Google Find My Device, and Chipolo companion app, however the tracking data is supposedly E2EE

  • Kowowow@lemmy.ca
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    10 hours ago

    I think there’s a thing with lora that compares the signals around the tag and your phone or such to try and work like an airtag tyoe thing