Dayton Daily News

FTC orders company to quit surveillan­ce app business

- By Frank Bajak

The Federal Trade BOSTON —

Commission has for the first time banned a company that makes so-called stalkerwar­e software

— used to surreptiti­ously track a cellphone user’s activities and location from continuing in the surveillan­ce

— app business.

Wednesday’s action applies to the marketer of SpyFone, Puerto Rico-based Support King LLC, and its CEO, Scott Zuckerman. Such commercial surveillan­ce products secretly obtain unfettered access to someone’s smartphone, leading to serious harm, the FTC said in a statement on its website.

Support King marketed SpyFone as a tool to monitor the activities of children and employees. But it neglected to prevent stalkers and domestic abusers from using it for surveillan­ce, the FTC said.

The company’s products let the installer monitor a person’s online activity, including text and video chats and, in a premium version, even secretly activate the device’s microphone to record phone and video conversati­ons.

The FTC found that not only is SpyFone sneaky — no icon appears on a phone after it is installed — but its developers also were negligent in protecting the data it collected on unsuspecti­ng victims from hackers. It said informatio­n from about 2,200 people had been compromise­d in a hacker’s breach of the company’s server.

There was no immediate response to an email seeking comment sent to the only contact address on the SpyFone website.

“Federal agencies have long been lax when it comes to allowing companies to peddle surveillan­ce products with impunity,” FTC commission­er Rohit Chopra said in a statement.

Online watchdogs led by the Electronic Frontier Foundation and the Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto have long complained of rampant abuse of stalkerwar­e, particular­ly in targeting victims of domestic violence.

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