eloquent_beaver

eloquent_beaver t1_ja1msvw wrote

These are all symbols that assert a relation between two objects. Relationships can include things like equality (=), greater than (>), taller than, heavier than, has more calories than, etc.

= most frequently is used to indicate equality. What equality means depends on the context, but for in the context of numbers, and the sake of simplicity you can take it to mean "numerically equal" (the same number). That's not really what it means, but in order to define the formal definition of equality we'd have to start talking about a particular axiom system, and that's not ELI5.

often means equivalence or congruence, which has different meanings in different contexts. In geometry, you might say two different triangles are congruent to each other—what that means has its own definition. In modular arithmetic, you might say two expressions are equivalent "modulo some integer." Again, the definition of equivalence varies depending on how you're using it.

Often means "if and only if," also known as a biconditional. It is used in logical propositions. I.e., it is part of the vocabulary in the language of making claims or statements that are either true or false. An example is "Bob will eat the ice cream if and only if it is vanilla flavored."

In order to understand biconditionals, it's helpful first to understand the conditional , which indicates an "if...then" relationship. For example, "If Sparky is a dog, then Sparking has four legs."

Is very similar, but has to do with logical implication. Implication means one statement follows from another. A two way implication would mean a statement follows from another, and vice versa. The difference is relates two expressions, and relates two statements.

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eloquent_beaver t1_j9mucmf wrote

No other GPS or bluetooth tracker does it, because it's not an in-scope problem for item trackers. Tiles, dog trackers, smart watches, Android phones, and hundreds of GPS tracker products never had any issue with this because no one ever cared. Apple made it into a problem. Kind of like their iCloud photos scanning feature—nobody asked for it, but Apple decided to make it an issue, and by virtue of their declaring it a huge problem, it suddenly was one for a vocal minority.

People who wanna do dumb criminal stuff can use any number of cheap, effective tools (any of the non-Apple products listed above will do), and it's their and law enforcement's problem.

But people don't like perfectly useful products being artificially handicapped for a truly marginal amount of additional hypothetical safety. People are going to continue to put AirTags and Tiles on their airport luggage and on their bikes and cars, because they want to be able to track their stuff down when it gets stolen.

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eloquent_beaver t1_j9lj2al wrote

That's just Apple artificially defining how people should use a product that's otherwise self-evidently applicable to a broad domain of use-cases.

Apple can say "We don't want people using AirTags for anti-theft or pet tracking," but people do and will continue to, because they're perfect (but for the annoying notifications that bother legitimate users and alert thieves) for anti-theft and that sort of stuff.

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