The way it should work, is that if the keys are nearby the user that owns them, the tracker shouldn't be giving unknown tracker notifications to other nearby users.
Curious that you are saying the travel eSIMs are a scam.
I've used them quite a lot around Europe and once or twice in Africa (and even locally, when I didn't have an unlimited data plan and used all of my allotted data by my carrier and it was easier to just buy an eSIM), and my experience has always been pretty good.
I've tried a few of these and can rarely pull more than a few megabits per second (in a location where a carrier's own SIM pulls 150+). The one time I actually needed one I could barely get even 1Mbps and it had horrible latency and packet loss. Getting a refund on the non-working product was also a chore, having to argue with CS agents that try to blame bad speed & packet loss on the wrong APN being used, while only one APN works at all (the others wouldn't give you any connection, so hard to get it wrong and still connect).
Note that I am talking about these Airalo, Nomad, etc eSIMs sold online, not eSIMs sold directly by the carrier themselves (the latter would generally be as good as the carrier's own prepaid offering).
>You're getting bottom-of-the-barrel capacity that (even if it works) is so slow that you'd be lucky to even use up half your data cap. You are always roaming and your data is tunnelled through what feels like some dial-up modem in some shady warehouse. These are a scam.
>I've tried a few of these and can rarely pull more than a few megabits per second (in a location where a carrier's own SIM pulls 150+).
That seems.. fine? If you're traveling and your use case is checking google maps, or logging into airbnb to pull up your booking, you don't need 150 Mb/s of speed and low latency. The only case where it might be dodgy is if you're doing voip calls or watching streaming videos, but why are you doing those things on vacation? Sure, it'd be nice to have a local sim with low latency and high speeds, that's often much more expensive than esims and/or comes with more hassle (eg. KYC or having to pick up the sim in-person).
You are severely underestimating the amount of JS and other tracker SDKs competing for traffic in the apps you mention. Browsing modern apps/websites on an unreliable 1Mbps connection is not pleasant, even more so when you're in a foreign country and rely on it to find directions/translate/etc. Not to mention if you suddenly need to download a local taxi/etc app that's 100MB.
That feature only exists on family/team accounts, and in that case the account that is allowed to perform recoveries has an escrow of the vault passwords of other team members.
The user who currently holds escrow can distribute those recovery keys to other accounts in that family/team/enterprise. This is why 1Password SaaS forces you to have at least one account admin (aka the user with recovery keys). If you somehow have 0 account admins, creating a recovery key -- without full decryption access to a vault, aka, user still knows their password & account key -- is impossible.
Some exist. I have the Philip 279M1RV, which is 4K 144Hz with a built-in KVM. It's not a perfect monitor, but was the best one I could find for my needs, spec-wise.
VRR missing is probably the only thing holding me back from swapping my Ally for it. It's sooo underrated of a feature, especially in hardware like those Windows handhelds.
The way it should work, is that if the keys are nearby the user that owns them, the tracker shouldn't be giving unknown tracker notifications to other nearby users.