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  2. ‘Days of Our Lives’ Star Jessica Serfaty Alerted to Hidden ...

    www.aol.com/entertainment/days-lives-star...

    Days of Our Lives star Jessica Serfaty reportedly found a tracking device hidden in her car. Serfaty, 33, recently discovered an Apple AirTag placed in her Range Rover, according to TMZ. Law ...

  3. How to Find and Disable a Hidden Apple AirTag That ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/disable-hidden-apple-airtag-could...

    Open the Find My app. Hold the AirTag near your iPhone. Tap the AirTag notification when it appears. The serial number will be listed at the top of the screen, along with the last four digits of ...

  4. LoJack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LoJack

    LoJack is a stolen-vehicle recovery and IoT-connected car system that utilizes GPS and cellular technology to locate users' vehicles, view trip-history, see battery levels, track speeding, and maintain vehicle-health via a native app. Prior to selling a vehicle, LoJack dealers can use the system to manage and locate inventory, view and manage battery-health, and recover stolen inventory.

  5. AirTag - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AirTag

    AirTag is a tracking device developed by Apple. [1] AirTag is designed to act as a key finder, which helps people find personal objects such as keys, bags, apparel, small electronic devices and vehicles.

  6. Spy pixel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spy_pixel

    How a tracking pixel works. Spy pixels or tracker pixels are hyperlinks to remote image files in HTML email messages that have the effect of spying on the person reading the email if the image is downloaded. [1] [2] They are commonly embedded in the HTML of an email as small, imperceptible, transparent graphic files. [3]

  7. Quadro Tracker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quadro_Tracker

    The Quadro Tracker, also known as the Positive Molecular Locator, was a fake "detection device" sold by Quadro Corp. of Harleyville, South Carolina between 1993 and 1996. Around 1,000 were sold to police departments and school districts around the United States on the basis that it could detect hidden drugs, explosives, weapons and lost golf balls.