One down,Foreign Archives far too many left to go.
On Wednesday the Federal Trade Commission announced it had banned SpyFone, the maker of a so-called stalkerware app, from the digital surveillance business. As their name suggests, stalkerware apps grant abusers the ability to secretly monitor the digital lives of anyone's phone they can get their hands on.
"The company's apps sold real-time access to their secret surveillance, allowing stalkers and domestic abusers to stealthily track the potential targets of their violence," reads the FTC's Sept. 1 announcement.
Notably, SpyFone (now doing business as Support King, LLC) and its CEO, Scott Zuckerman, neither admitted nor denied the FTC's numerous allegations — allegations which even go beyond the already numerous horrors of stalkerware.
"SpyFone's lack of basic security also exposed device owners to hackers, identity thieves, and other cyber threats," writes the FTC.
It appears a lot of innocent device owners are wrapped up in this. A consent order agreement accompanying the FTC announcement points to SpyFone.com, a website which claims that it's the "World's Leading Spy Phone App" with "Millions Installed." Clicking through to the linked Google Play store, which is still up as of the time of this writing, shows "1,000,000+" downloads.
While undoubtedly a scourge of the modern age, stalkerware itself is not a new problem. Eva Galperin, the Electronic Frontier Foundation's director of cybersecurity, spoke with Mashable back in 2019 about the tech's wide reach.
"Like other forms of domestic abuse, the use of stalkerware on phones affects people from all walks of life," she explained at the time. "I have been contacted by men being spied on by women, men being spied on by men, and women being spied on by women, but the majority of cases that I see are of women whose phones are being spied on by a partner or a former partner, who is usually a man."
SEE ALSO: How to find stalkerware on your smartphone
Interestingly, part of the FTC's proposed settlement requires SpyFone to notify potential victims — displaying a warning message on their compromised devices:
Someone may have secretly monitored your phone.
The Federal Trade Commission has alleged that Support King sold illegal monitoring products, which may have been installed on this phone. The software has been disabled.
This phone may still not be secure. Photos, emails, texts, and location were collected from this phone.
For details, visit [hyperlink to FTC blog] or call 877-382-4357.
For help, call the National Domestic Violence Hotline 800−799−7233 using a secure phone. If you’re in danger, call 911.
This is not the first time the FTC has moved against the maker of a stalkerware app — in 2019 it was the developer of MobileSpy, PhoneSheriff, and TeenShield — and it hopefully won't be the last. The stalkerware industry is one predicated on abuse, and the sooner companies like SpyFone are forced to exit the world of digital surveillance the better.
Topics Cybersecurity Privacy
9 things you need to know about how to behave around assistance dogs'Where does this stop?' Obama blasts proposed Muslim ban following Orlando attackAngela Bassett shares a big 'Infinity War' spoiler about her characterApril the giraffe is pregnant again, and we're already tiredEmilia Clarke shows that Grey Worm is not as slick as he seems on 'Game of Thrones''Game of Thrones' final season coming in first half of 2019Cities across the world show their support for Orlando shooting victimsYes, your dog has a horoscope. So does your gerbil.Cord cutters increase to 32 percent in 2018, pay TV declinesAustralian music festival criticised for including only one woman in lineupLondon shows solidarity with Orlando shooting victimsHillary Clinton guest spot on 'Madam Secretary' hyped with epic photoThese are the companies with the fewest women in leadership rolesArya Stark's miraculous recovery did not convince a cynical InternetApple pushes out 2018 MacBook Pro update to fix throttling issueSean Penn wanted to name his son Steak, which seems about right'Rick and Morty' coHBO confirmed the 'Deadwood' movie again, but it's for real this timeMaisie Williams isn't sorry for spoiling 'Game of Thrones'eBay will begin rolling out Apple Pay this fall Girl took cardboard cutout of Danny DeVito to prom so he took her cutout to Paddy’s Pub Apple has been granted a restraining order against a woman who was allegedly stalking CEO Tim Cook Tesla Cybertruck won't be made in 2022, Elon Musk confirms Angry alligator knocks out trapper with a headbutt Serena Williams trolled her husband Alexis Ohanian's Instagram Live — and it was everything Asghar Farhadi's 'A Hero' review: No good deed goes unpunished AT&T multi The 13 best Hulu original shows to stream right now Sean Spicer really wants you to know he was NOT hiding in the bushes Willem Dafoe joined the whole 'SNL' cast for a deranged NYC apartment tenant meeting TikTok is adding new features to fight antisemitism This guy has apparently watched 'Infinity War' 43 times since its release Trump's tweet about pardoning himself inspired some relatable parodies J.K. Rowling sends super sweet reply to single parent who thanked her for 'Harry Potter' Peloton is connected to another TV heart attack, this time on 'Billions' Google search results for 'Wordle' now feature a delightful Easter egg How to set a reminder for a scheduled Instagram Live Microsoft's Activision buy can — and should — save Infocom from obscurity Spain's new female NASA's Hubble delivers stunning view of three galaxies in a single image
2.4345s , 10132.3984375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Foreign Archives】,New Knowledge Information Network