enneff 2 days ago

By “your traffic” you mean device location reports? Or something else?

  • fc417fc802 a day ago

    Yes. It's "edge routing" that happens to be restricted to a single operator.

  • DANmode 2 days ago

    The data that powers the app tracking your devices, shown on your devices, yes.

    (What else?)

    • enneff a day ago

      I don’t know. I wouldn’t have thought of myself as proxying other people’s traffic by carrying my iPhone around. (For one thing, it’s my own phone that initiates all the activity- it monitors for Apple devices, the devices don’t reach out to my phone.) I can see how you could frame it that way, though. I just thought they might be referring to something else that I didn’t know about.

      • MBCook a day ago

        I remain skeptical. I can understand how one would might see it that way, but I think it’s stretching the word proxy too far.

        Devices on Apple’s Find My aren’t broadcasting anything like packets that get forwarded to a destination of their choosing. I would think that would be a necessity to call it “proxying”.

        They’re just broadcasting basic information about themselves into the void. The phones report back what they’ve picked up.

        That doesn’t fit the definition to me.

        I absolutely don’t mind the fact that my phone is doing that. The amount of data is ridiculously minuscule. And it’s sort of a tit for tat thing. Yeah my phone does it, but so does theirs. So just like I may be helping you locate your AirTag, you would be helping me locate mine. Or any other device I own that shows up on Find My.

        It’s a very close to a classic public good, with the only restriction being that you own a relevant device.

        • DANmode a day ago

          > aren’t broadcasting anything like packets that get forwarded to a destination of their choosing

          Protocol insists the data only goes back to owner device or Apple server.