New software that hides on cell phones and captures call logs and text messages is being sold as a way to monitor kids and spouses. But one security company calls it a Trojan horse.
The
FlexiSpy application captures call logs, text messages and mobile Internet activity, among other things. The software, released at the beginning of March, sells for $49.95 and is advertised by Bangkok, Thailand-based
Vervata as a tool to monitor kids and unfaithful spouses. The data captured is sent to Vervata’s servers and is accessible to customers via a special Web site.
FlexiSpy has attracted a different kind of criticism from security company F-Secure, which has
labeled the software a Trojan, or a malicious program that disguises itself as something innocuous.
"This application installs itself without any kind of indication as to what it is," Jarno Niemela wrote on the Finnish antivirus maker’s
corporate blog Wednesday. "And when it is installed on the phone, it completely hides itself from the user."
Vervata could not be immediately reached for comment, but in a question-and-answer section of
the FlexiSpy Web site, the company insists the program is not malicious.
"FlexiSpy requires to be consciously installed and configured by someone, unlike a Virus or Trojan which spreads automatically without any action," the section reads.
FlexiSpy is available for cell phones that
run the Symbian operating system, such as Nokia Series 60 handsets. Vervata plans to release by the end of April a version for Research In Motion’s BlackBerry, as well as for devices that run Microsoft’s Windows Mobile Pocket PC operating system, according to the company’s Web site.
Vervata is still working on "FlexiSpy Pro," which will log e-mail and multimedia messages, in addition to the other data, according to the company’s Web site. That version will also include a "monitoring" feature that lets the user call the target cell phone from a preset number and listen in on what’s going on in the background, in much the same way a baby monitor works.