Showing posts with label iOS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iOS. Show all posts

Friday, December 23, 2022

Eavesdropping & Anti-Eavesdropping Apps

Two new apps to be aware of…

The iEavesdrop app redirects internal microphone, external wired microphone or line input input audio to any Bluetooth audio device such as AirPods so that you can use your phone as a stealth listening device.

Using the correct line input cables, audio from any device such as an external microphone, in-flight entertainment or portable gaming device can be routed to your AirPods or other Bluetooth device. iEavesdrop will work with all iOS devices.

THIS APP CAN ALSO BE USED FOR MANY OTHER PURPOSES SUCH AS A BABY MONITOR, HEARING AID OR ANY OTHER APPLICATION THAT REQUIRES YOU TO LISTEN IN OR ROUTE MICROPHONE AUDIO TO A BLUETOOTH DEVICE.
(iOS)


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(ANDROID)

About this app...
Ever thought someone might eavesdrop through your smart phone? Skewy is a privacy protection method, which is more than just a software setting. With Skewy you can mask your conversation with a simple – yet effective method. Simply making the audio data picked up by your phone unusable. Additionally, Skewy can detect ultrasonic signals to indicate the presence of device tracking technologies.

Saturday, September 19, 2020

Apple's iOS 14 Now Alerts You To Eavesdropping & Spycam'ing

Any time an app access your microphone, a little amber dot will appear in the status bar, over by where the Wi-Fi and cellular connection symbols are. 

When an app access the camera, a green dot will appear. 


These are fairly universally understood as “recording” lights and they will clearly point out when an app you’re using is accessing the camera or microphone at times it shouldn’t.

Just since the release of the iOS 14 beta, the lights have already revealed sketchy behavior in several apps that have gone on to promise updates to fix the “bugs.” (good word to use)

This and six other new privacy features can be found here... more

Wednesday, June 17, 2020

Privacy Protector – Anonymous Camera for iPhone

 A new camera app has been released for iOS that, unlike basically every other photography app, is designed to hide the photo’s subject rather than highlight them. Called Anonymous Camera, this app works to protect the people captured in a video or photo by blurring or otherwise hiding their faces — or, in cases where it is necessary, by removing their bodies entirely.

There are times when you may need to interview someone or take a picture, but hide someone featured in the content for their sake. This could include interviews with someone who wishes to remain private, protecting whistleblowers, or simply hiding the faces of protesters and activists so that facial recognition technology can’t be used to identify them.

Anonymous Camera is a free app that can perform these actions, as well as entirely removing the subject’s body in cases where they have other identifiers like tattoos. The app is free to download, though there’s also a Pro version priced at $2 that includes watermark-free video recording. more

Tuesday, November 20, 2018

Spybuster Tip #720 - iPhone Knows What You Did Last Summer... and how to stop it.

Your iPhone knows where you go and how often.

The feature is called Significant Locations, and it is buried deep within iPhone's reptilian brain. 

Want a peak?
  • Open Settings
  • Open Privacy
  • Open Location Services
  • Scroll to the very end and open System Services
  • Keep scrolling until you hit Significant Locations
  • At this point, you will need to sign in again.
If the feature hasn't been turned off, prepare for an eye opening surprise.

Significant Locations may include the locations of, and frequency of visits to, significant others, whom you would rather not have your other significant others know about. 

Or, if you are an investigator, it just might help you crack a case!

~Kevin

Tuesday, January 2, 2018

Stop Your Apps from Spying on Your TV Viewing

That innocent-looking mobile game you just downloaded might just have an ulterior motive. Behind the scenes, hundreds of different apps could be using your smartphone's microphone to figure out what you watch on TV, a new report from The New York Times reveals...

Basically, a bunch of apps with innocuous names like "Pocket Bowling 3D" include extra software that's designed to listen for recognizable audio from your TV, including specific shows and commercials...

All of these apps need to get your permission before they can record in the background. So the easiest way is just to deny that permission. However, it's possible that you might approved the request without realising it, or your kid might do it while playing with your phone. In that case, switching it off is pretty easy...

Just head into Settings on your device and check the permissions for the app in question. If the app has microphone access when it doesn't need to (why would a bowling game need to use your microphone?), just toggle that permission off. more

Thursday, December 29, 2016

Mobile Security: The InfoWorld Deep Dive

As iPhones, iPads, and Android devices become increasingly standard business equipment, IT organizations struggle on how to manage and secure them, and the data that runs through them.

Click to enlarge.
This guide, available in both PDF and ePub editions, explains the security capabilities inherent to each major mobile platform and where using third-party tools make sense -- and where they don't.

It also walks you through the factors to consider in terms of risk for your corporate data, and outlines a rational way to protect that data without getting tied up in knots.  more

Click to enlarge.