Tile Unhappy With Apple’s AirTag Launch, ‘Skeptical’ About Fair Competition and Plans to Tattle to Congress

Just hours after Apple unveiled its long-awaited AirTag, Tile CEO CJ Prober released a statement expressing his concerns about competition in the item tracking arena.

As relayed by TechCrunch, Prober said that while Tile welcomes “fair competition,” the company is “skeptical” about Apple’s aims, given its “history of using platform advantage to unfairly limit competition.”

Tile plans to ask congress to take a look at Apple’s business practices specific to Find My and competition with other item tracking options. The full statement is below:

Our mission is to solve the everyday pain point of finding lost and misplaced things and we are flattered to see Apple, one of the most valuable companies in the world, enter and validate the category Tile pioneered.

The reason so many people turn to Tile to locate their lost or misplaced items is because of the differentiated value we offer our consumers. In addition to providing an industry leading set of features via our app that works with iOS and Android devices, our service is seamlessly integrated with all major voice assistants, including Alexa and Google. And with form factors for every use case and many different styles at affordable prices, there is a Tile for everyone.

Tile has also successfully partnered with top brands like HP, Intel, Skullcandy and fitbit to enable our finding technology in mass market consumer categories like laptops, earbuds and wearables. With over 30 partners, we look forward to extending the benefits of Tile to millions of customers and enabling an experience that helps you keep track of all your important belongings.

We welcome competition, as long as it is fair competition. Unfortunately, given Apple’s well-documented history of using its platform advantage to unfairly limit competition for its products, we’re skeptical. And given our prior history with Apple, we think it is entirely appropriate for Congress to take a closer look at Apple’s business practices specific to its entry into this category. We welcome the opportunity to discuss these issues further in front of Congress tomorrow.

To avoid complaints like the one that Tile is going to make to congress, Apple waited to unveil the AirTag until it had launched the ‌Find My‌ Network accessory program, which is designed to allow third-party item trackers to integrate into the ‌Find My‌ app right alongside AirTags.

Third-party accessory makers can build ‌Find My‌ tracking into their Bluetooth devices, with U1 chip support coming in the near future. If desired, Tile could create item tracking tags designed to integrate with the ‌Find My‌ app, but Tile has its own established accessory finding network already.

‌Find My‌ accessories can only operate with the ‌Find My‌ app, and it is unlikely that Tile will want to give up its customer base to create a ‌Find My‌ tag that works with Apple devices alone. Tile believes that just by releasing an item tracker, Apple will be able to dominate the market because of its first-party advantage.

Apple’s ‌AirTags‌ are set to be available for order on April 23, with a launch coming on April 30.Tags: Tile, AirTags
This article, “Tile Unhappy With Apple’s AirTag Launch, ‘Skeptical’ About Fair Competition and Plans to Tattle to Congress” first appeared on MacRumors.com

Discuss this article in our forums

MacRumors-All?d=6W8y8wAjSf4 MacRumors-All?d=qj6IDK7rITs

Related posts

Latest posts

I’ve experienced the next era of AI, and I’m never going back

A new era of AI agents in emerging, and Google's Deep Research showed me the power of them first-hand.

This audio upgrade cable costs $799, and it is incredible

Effect Audio's Code 24 is aimed squarely at enthusiasts.

Apple Honors Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

Apple has updated the home page of its website to honor Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. today. The page highlights

New iPad Air Models With M3 Chip Seemingly Confirmed by Leaker

Apple's next-generation iPad Air and entry-level iPad models have seemingly been confirmed today by known leaker Evan Blass.In a private

Instagram Unveils ‘Edits’ App as CapCut Rival

Instagram has unveiled a new video editing app called Edits, which aims to fill the void left by CapCut's removal

AirPods 4 With ANC Drop to $164.99 on Amazon

Amazon today has one of the first notable discounts of the year on the AirPods 4 with Active Noise Cancellation,

iPhone SE 4 Leak Shows Dynamic Island, Casts Doubt on Rumored ‘iPhone 16E’ Name

A new iPhone SE is widely rumored to launch this year, and the device has potentially been confirmed today by

Mail app for macOS will soon get an overdue AI upgrade

Apple demoed an AI-charged Mail experience months ago, but delayed one of the crucial tricks for Macs. It seems a macOS update will finally serve it in April.

I compared the two of the most powerful mobile chipsets — here’s what happened

The Snapdragon 8 Elite and Dimensity 9400 are two of the most popular smartphone chips. I compared them head-to-head.

Qualcomm expands Snapdragon 8 Elite lineup with new 7-core variant

The lower-tier offering comes as Qualcomm is rumored to be working on midrange and overclocked Snapdragon 8 Elite variants.