As the viral Coldplay concert scandal continues to unfold, new allegations suggest that Kristin Cabot’s husband may have known about the relationship long before the couple was caught on the stadium’s big screen.
According to sources close to the situation, Cabot’s husband reportedly installed a child-tracking app on her mobile phone months earlier, initially under the pretext of family safety. The app, commonly used by parents to monitor their children’s location, allegedly revealed repeated movements that did not match her routine — raising early suspicions of infidelity.
While no official confirmation has been made by the parties involved, the claim is now circulating widely online and has reignited debate about privacy, digital surveillance, and trust within relationships.
Experts note that apps originally designed for child protection — such as FindKiko.com and similar GPS-based services — are increasingly being repurposed to monitor romantic partners. What began as a safety tool for parents has quietly become a modern instrument of relationship surveillance.
“Location apps have completely changed how people investigate suspicion,” explains one digital privacy analyst. “They were built to protect children, but in reality they’re now often used to confirm doubts between adults.”
