The Apple AirTag 2 is here, after many years of waiting, and with it comes a bunch of new upgrades and design changes. Before launch, it had been rumored that the trackers would come with a louder speaker that’s harder to tamper with — a change that would have been a major boon to security. Sadly, it seems this isn’t the case.

While Apple promised that the second-generation AirTag would have “a suite of industry-first protections against unwanted tracking,” a teardown from iFixit revealed this doesn’t extend to the physical speaker itself. In fact, far from being tamper-proof, they found it’s just as easy to disable as the original AirTag.

Apple Tried To Tamper Proof AirTag 2 Speakers – I Broke It – YouTube
Apple Tried To Tamper Proof AirTag 2 Speakers - I Broke It - YouTube

Watch On

track innocent people far too often. Apple has done a lot of work to help warn people (primarily iPhone users) when there’s a strange AirTag following them around. But getting alerts is only part of the story, since victims can force those rogue AirTags to make noise to help track them down.

Likewise, AirTags that have been separated from their owners’ devices for too long will chirp to make their presence known — something that is designed to prevent people from being tracked without their knowledge.

No speaker means the act of finding a strange AirTag is significantly harder, and that’s why AirTag stalkers have been known to tamper with the speaker. Even if they don’t manage to disable the speaker entirely, muffling the sound can have a similar effect.

Making a speaker tamper-proof, or at least significantly harder to tamper with without breaking the AirTag, could have been a huge step toward improving public safety. It wouldn’t stop talkers using AirTags (or similar trackers) from trying to follow their victims’ movements, but it would have made it much harder to get away with it undetected.

At the very least, it would be nice if Apple had made the act of disabling the AirTag 2’s speaker a little harder than breaking two measly little wires. I don’t think that’s too much to ask for.

Google News

Follow Tom’s Guide on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our up-to-date news, analysis, and reviews in your feeds.