Google’s Find My Device network has finally launched and the Pixel 8 gets special tracking powers – TechRadar

Posted: April 12, 2024 at 5:52 am

Googles long awaited Find My Device network is finally rolling out, so youll be able to track your devices, even when theyre offline.

According to a Google blog post, this is a worldwide rollout, starting with the US and Canada, so if you live elsewhere you might be waiting another few days or so. Still, it should be worth the wait, as this looks to be a powerful upgrade to the company's pre-existing Find My Device functionality.

Previously, youd only be able to use Find My Device to track your phone if it was connected to the internet but if it was offline (i.e. without a network connection) youd be out of luck.

Now though, with the company's new Find My Device network, you can track offline devices too; as the network can leverage over a billion Android devices worldwide to locate any lost devices that are within Bluetooth proximity, including new trackers from Chipolo and Pebblebee.

Better yet, if youre looking for a Google Pixel 8 or a Pixel 8 Pro, thanks to specialized Pixel hardware youll be able to find your phone even if its shut down or the battery is dead.

Presumably, this feature will come to the Google Pixel 9 and other future Pixel phones too, and we wouldnt be surprised if other brands also get in on the action, but for now its a Pixel 8-exclusive perk.

The new Find My Device network also works with Bluetooth tags from Chipolo and Pebblebee, while support for tags from additional brands are set to be added later this year. As a result, if you attach one of these tags to a wallet, your keys, or any other item that doesnt have its own Bluetooth signal, youll be able to track those too.

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Just as with the concerns around Apple's 'Find My' network, Googles Find My Device network was built with privacy and security in mind, so youll also get unknown tracker alerts if you appear to be being followed by a Bluetooth tag that you havent registered.

The network isnt just designed for tracking distant items either. Theres also a Find nearby button that will help you pinpoint the exact location of nearby items, and if youve lost an item in your home, then you can also see its proximity to any Nest devices you have.

Additionally, there's the option to share tracking for a device with friends or family members, so you can all track and locate the item when lost. But unless you choose to share, everything is kept private and secure with features like end-to-end encryption of location data and aggregated device location reporting.

It has been a long wait for all these features. Google originally planned to roll out its new Find My Device network around the middle of 2023, but then delayed it to give time for Apple to fully roll out unknown tracker alerts (so that people couldnt use the Find My Device network to track iPhone users without them being alerted). Said unknown tracker feature finally lands with iOS 17.5, which is currently in beta, leaving Google once again free to launch its upgraded Find My Device network.

The big question now is, if and when well see Google AirTags or in other words, the companys rival to the Apple AirTag. As with such a powerful-sounding Find My Device feature now available, it would make sense for Google to introduce its own Bluetooth tracker a device we've already heard rumor of.

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Google's Find My Device network has finally launched and the Pixel 8 gets special tracking powers - TechRadar

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