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Apple To Launch “Find My” App, Which Has Been Targeted In Antitrust Probe

 |  April 7, 2021

iPhones will soon be able to track lost items using a built-in app called Find My, Apple announced on Wednesday, April 7.

The first products that work with Find My will be released next week, Apple stated. The products include e-bikes from VanMoof, wireless earbuds from Belkin, and an item finder from Chipolo. These products will use other people’s Apple devices in a privacy-sensitive way to find lost objects and show their location inside the Find My app on a map.

The service has been dogged by scrutiny from lawmakers and complaints from Tile and other companies that sell competing products. Tile has brought complaints to the European Union and participates in an industry group that is critical of Apple.

Find My was originally announced last summer at Apple’s annual developer conference and builds on an existing service called Find My iPhone.

For Apple, the Find My app is a feature for its customers that adds to the value of the iPhone, and if it’s useful, it could make users less likely to switch to competing Android devices.

In January 2020, Tile’s general counsel, Kirsten Daru, testified in front of a congressional hearing accusing Apple of using its market power to disadvantage Tile’s product and favor its own services, including adding pop-ups to iPhone software that required users to repeatedly agree to let Tile’s software operate in the background.

Tile also cited reports from analysts and media that pointed to Apple preparing its own lost-item tracker hardware and said that as Apple was reportedly working on that product that it had started to hassle Tile, including removing its products from Apple retail stores.

Apple disagreed with Tile’s arguments, and stated at the time that it would make changes to its iPhone software that would allow Tile’s product to work better, such as letting it run in the background. It later announced the Find My program.

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