How would you have liked your parents following you around when you were a kid, spying on you. Going through your diaries and reading everything, searching through your rooms?? My kids are grown and I never ever went through their rooms or their things to "check on them". They now have university degrees, they don't smoke, take drugs, or do anything illegal, and they stay away from those who do. So no there is no justification ever for spying. You're all just nosy control freaks. To call a parent disgusting for wanting to keep track of their kids is insane. It's not a violation of trust, it's called parenting!
This world is a scary place for kids and you'll understand every sentence I just typed when you're a parent. You're not supposed to understand, and that's ok, but I do take issue with you calling a parent disgusting for caring enough to keep track of their child. And I did understand every sentence being also a parent. I am disgusted by the people who try to impose their morals on others. When it comes to kids, I want the first hand information about where they are and what they do. And it should be me having it and not Google or Apple.
Oh the irony in the statement: "I am disgusted by the people who try to impose their morals on others. Google and Apple both provide methods to physically track consensually devices already. Try having an open discussion with your children about these features. Try considering their point of view, knowing you can read every text message and view every photo taken. Have a think about the boundary issues you're likely fostering with such an intrusive heavy-handed approach.
If you're thinking "but my kids can't be trusted with a smartphone! Teensafe is a monitoring service you can use on iPhones and you do not have to jailbreak the target phone first. As I know you cannot avoid being monitored by this unless you never use a iPhone. Of course the smartphones provide us with great convenience, but also brings us with danger. There are many monitoring software such as the iKeyMonitor, it can log whatever typed on your phone and send it to the present email.
Wish you good luck. And if you suspect that your phone was monitored,then you can have it factory-setting. First, let me be clear to everyone that I am a parent to a son that is on the precipice of entering his teenage years, and I have also had my heart broken as a victim of infidelity that was happening behind my back for two years, on and off, in my first "serious" relationship, post-divorcing my son's father. That being said, I'm sure people's initial reactions are something regarding how stupid or blind was I to be unaware I was the mere mark of a slimy cheating scumbag for two years.
The answer is simple. I am a trusting person, who wants to believe and see the good in people first. I am probably too trusting, and am fully aware that giving blind trust to new people in my life, or what some refer to as "the benefit of the doubt", might be foolishly naive to a fault. I have felt the sting of humiliation from being taken advantage of, lied to, and my extension of trust to someone being exploited and taken for granted.
However, as long as I live by the "fool me once Like most though, the exiled ones never think about what they had until they can't ever have it again. I digress, but here is my point. I do not believe in snooping or utilizing spyware under any circumstances, be it your children, your employees, or your significant other! Invasion of privacy and an individual's right to have their personal life remain just that, personal, is one of the main civil liberties this county was founded on.
I was raised with heavy handed consequences as motivation that if a piece of mail doesn't have my name on it, then it is not for me to open and read. I still believe in the right to privacy today, and the people commenting here that believe themselves to be justified in their spying might as well go fill out a job application down at the NSA.
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You the U. Notorious for the highly publicized controversy regarding the excessive snooping their office has done through the American public's cell phones. They attempt to justify their spy games as a necessary part of preventing terrorist activities that could threaten us on our home turf. For anyone that believes that tripe, please hear me now. On a side note, I would like to remind all those affiliated with our national government that the famous novel "" was meant to be read as a fictional story, not a user's manual.
The bottom line is that the truth always comes out in the end. I didn't need spyware to figure out that dip shit boyfriend was cheating, and if you are suspicious your spouse is up to no good, forget wasting time and money to find out the painful details about what your gut instinct is already trying to tell you.
Instead, spend the money on a makeover or vacation with your friends, tell the cheater he better call Tyrone, and move on to better things. For the spying parents out there, it's as simple as this. If you haven't formed a relationship with your kids based on trust, meaning there are boundaries that are always to be respected on both sides, combined with creating an environment where your kids feel safe having an open dialogue with you about their personal lives and coming of age issues.
That entails not being psychotic with rules, overly protective against the dangers of the big bad world that is waiting for them no matter how hard you try to shelter them, and treating them with basic human respect.
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Trust me, if your teen finds out even once that you snooped through their room or phone, that's it. You will have broken the circle of trust for good, and they are going to start hiding everything from you, and they are better at hiding shit than the worst terrorist groups of our time. Besides, I was about as horrible a teenager as they come. I was sneaky as heck, a great liar in a pinch, partied constantly, and generally risked my life as often as I could as I fledged the nest.
But, guess what? I lived. I also learned. And, most importantly, when I ran into bumps along the way, I felt I could, and I did many many times, call home to mom and dad for advice or help. I can't say I would have felt the same way about talking to them if they had been spying on me behind my back early on. Trust is an extremely delicate block amongst the other elements that form the foundation of a strong healthy mutually beneficial relationship. Just one crack in the trust block could crumble the whole thing to the ground for good.
Honesty is the best policy, albeit cliche sounding, it is an adage as old as the golden rule, and both sayings hold water under any contextual circumstance that calls upon their use. I can't think of a single phrase, adage, rule, or saying that is used to give merit or justification to spying on another person. Just saying I just want to reply to a comment by a Cjones. You can get limited access via spyware that is remotely set up to view things such as sms and call log etc.
But this is not something you need to download on the target phone to do. Also Bluetooth and wifi can be turned on without unlocking a phone. Although physical access is required. As long as Siri is active she will turn it on for you. You can post to Facebook or Twitter check the notes add to calendar and make calls or send sms all without unlocking the phone via the passcode.
This is on the current iOS software. Just something to be mindful off. Thanks for the article. We have a serious and legitimate concern for the safety of our teenager someone wanting to contact her with harmful intentions- an actual someone- not a perceived threat. My daughter is not fully aware of the consequences of her actions. We were considering a nanny-type software to use it as a learning tool.
We wanted to monitor her activity and then talk to her about anything concerning or dangerous such as giving out personal details to people on activities and whereabouts. But when I would do my searches, they would always come up with the word "spy" and that was bothering me. That's not what I'm wanting to do.
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Thank you for the information and clarity on this. I will see if there is something less intrusive we can do to help protect her but still let her have her privacy. Also, when you check through your apps in the way that you showed for Cydia For instance the compass app says "compass" but to the right side of the screen, the word "extra" appears.
Thanks Tim, This people who attempt to rationalize this type of behavior need to take a few steps back and take a good look at themselves What they and all iPhone users should really be worried about is how easy it is for the government to snoop on THEM! Take note As far as I'm concerned, any parent who is spying on their children in this way are engaging in clearly illegal and immoral activity. Imagine when you were growing up Did your parents listen in or record your phone calls? Did they rip open your mail and read it? Or read your diary? How would you have felt?
All these actions are clearly a violation of ones "Right to Privacy". And this goes for you people doing this to your spouse as well!
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Anyone who attempts to justify these actions are kidding themselves In complete denial! At last, some sense! Most of the comments I get on this article these days are from the tin foil hat brigade who completely forget about small inconsequential things like the law and upstanding moral behaviour. Don't get me wrong, I appreciate the concern that parents and to a lesser extent suspicious partners have, but your inability to rationalise doesn't put you above the law. I didn't know the Right To Privacy was a right children have with their parents.
News to me.