Two good car antitheft measures are AirTags and stick shifts
A carjacker in Chicago has been recently apprehended thanks to an AirTag that directed authorities to him, and a stick shift he couldn't use.
AirTags can help
The would-be carjacker, Andrew Moran, allegedly knocked on the victim's driver side door as she sat in the parking lot of a strip mall in a part of Chicago.
Moran instructed the victim to get out because he "needed" to take the car because someone would murder him if he didn't, according to the prosecution. The woman exited the vehicle and dialed 911 from a nearby store because she thought Moran had a pistol in his jacket pocket, according to CWBChicago.
According to the prosecution, Moran struggled to move her Audi A3 while she dialed for assistance because he wasn't familiar with driving a stick shift. Finally, he gave up and fled after hearing police sirens, but surveillance cameras caught the entire carjacking attempt.
He ran from the scene with the victim's keys, which had an AirTag attached. Police tracking him realized the key fob was traveling along a train.
They intercepted an inbound train at the Addison station and arrested Moran. Police found the woman's key fob on the train car, and a passenger allegedly told them Moran dropped it as they arrived.
During a court appearance on Saturday afternoon, Moran was charged with aggravated batter of officers and vehicle hijacking. Judge Charles Beach ordered him to pay a $15,000 bail deposit to be released on electronic monitoring.
The Apple AirTag is an item tracker that can be attached to objects like backpacks or keychains. When in lost mode, it uses the Find My ecosystem to ping adjacent Apple devices so people can find them.
Apple's tracking device has saved others as well. For example, a woman in Australia discovered that her boyfriend was tracking her with an AirTag in February.
"It wasn't until I told him I was going to the police to report it that he finally confessed," she continued. "I felt so violated and I was in a state of shock. It just blew my mind that someone I trusted so much could do something like this."
She has since ended the relationship.
Read on AppleInsider
AirTags can help
The would-be carjacker, Andrew Moran, allegedly knocked on the victim's driver side door as she sat in the parking lot of a strip mall in a part of Chicago.
Moran instructed the victim to get out because he "needed" to take the car because someone would murder him if he didn't, according to the prosecution. The woman exited the vehicle and dialed 911 from a nearby store because she thought Moran had a pistol in his jacket pocket, according to CWBChicago.
According to the prosecution, Moran struggled to move her Audi A3 while she dialed for assistance because he wasn't familiar with driving a stick shift. Finally, he gave up and fled after hearing police sirens, but surveillance cameras caught the entire carjacking attempt.
He ran from the scene with the victim's keys, which had an AirTag attached. Police tracking him realized the key fob was traveling along a train.
They intercepted an inbound train at the Addison station and arrested Moran. Police found the woman's key fob on the train car, and a passenger allegedly told them Moran dropped it as they arrived.
During a court appearance on Saturday afternoon, Moran was charged with aggravated batter of officers and vehicle hijacking. Judge Charles Beach ordered him to pay a $15,000 bail deposit to be released on electronic monitoring.
The Apple AirTag is an item tracker that can be attached to objects like backpacks or keychains. When in lost mode, it uses the Find My ecosystem to ping adjacent Apple devices so people can find them.
Apple's tracking device has saved others as well. For example, a woman in Australia discovered that her boyfriend was tracking her with an AirTag in February.
"It wasn't until I told him I was going to the police to report it that he finally confessed," she continued. "I felt so violated and I was in a state of shock. It just blew my mind that someone I trusted so much could do something like this."
She has since ended the relationship.
Read on AppleInsider
Comments
The above is not another example of the AirTag saving somebody, but an example of iOS notification saving someone FROM an AirTag. It is an example of an AirTag used for a bad purpose -- the opposite of what the article tries to illustrate.
Unfortunately it is getting much more difficult to find newer cars equipped with manual transmissions. Of course manual transmissions aren't a panacea, especially if you're driving in stop & go traffic or uncomfortable with stopping and starting on hills.
I've also driven a few hybrids. Several have different start methods/procedures. Most have antitheft mechanisms. I expect eye scans or fingerprint activated starters in the future for most cars (to reduce theft insurance). Not knowing the steps to start a given hybrid could also slow down a thief (or not having the correct key fob).
Maybe none of the cars in the photo are parked legally because the drivers had to pay more attention to not stalling out at low speed than to properly centering the vehicle in the parking space. A certain amount of practice with the clutch is needed. Or maybe the drivers were drunk on moonshine or otherwise intoxicated. The license plate is from Colorado. Believe wacky tebacky is legal there.
I don't enjoy driving a manual in the city. Country roads with low traffic are more suited to a manual. Many hybrids have a continuously variable, computer controlled transmission (a power share device with the engine and motors, also used during regenerative braking to charge the traction battery). Some hybrids seem to have a "normal" automatic. Many hybrids lack a starter motor, belts, and a few other devices found on a conventional infernal combustion engine. I've never driven a purely electric vehicle (either one that is charged, or one that uses hydrogen and a fuel cell). I live about 5 miles from a Tesla dealership, but likely will keep my Prius for some time to come. The two Prius units I've owned have been much more reliable than my Saturn, two Escorts, Chevy Nova, VW or the company owned cars and trucks that I've driven in the past.
The list of bad reasons to track someone is infinite, but so are the good reasons to do so. The most important thing is the permission from the person being tracked. (Duh…)
Once again, let's remember how tracker tags had already been around for years before Apple introduced Air Tags. Nobody else did anything to prevent the abuse of their tracking devices until after Apple released Air Tags and very publicly included anti-stalking features. Tile introduced an anti stalking Tile scanner app in response, and then backtracked, giving stalkers an option to make Tile tags invisible and stalk anyway, as long as they agree to pay Tile One Million Dollars if they're caught stalking with a Tile tracker.
Find My on phones allows two people to track each other for all kinds of positive reasons, and they know what those positive reasons are when they opt in. Tracking another person with a tag doesn't ensure that opt-in decision, and therefore is simply not allowed by the device's programming.
EDIT: Now that I think of it, there actually is a way for a track-ee to opt in to being tracked with an Air Tag, and it's the anti-stalking feature that enables it. Person A can tell Person B that there's an Air Tag in the car Person B is borrowing (or whatever), and when an alert about that tag comes up later on their phone, they'll know what it is and dismiss it, because they have knowingly opted in.
Um, it kind of sounds like you're saying that surreptitiously tracking your partner is justified if you SUSPECT them of seeing someone else? I'm quite confident that you're wrong, both ethically and legally.