This page is educational and does not replace legal advice. Requests involving hacking, illegal tapping, spyware, intimidation, doxing, extortion, or unauthorized account access are not accepted.
Privacy concerns should be handled carefully
A phone that behaves strangely does not always mean spyware is installed. Battery drain, overheating, unknown apps, account alerts, and unusual permissions may have several explanations.
The safest approach is to document signs, preserve evidence, and avoid installing more unknown tools.
What to do first
Record the timeline, screenshots of alerts, unknown apps, device changes, suspicious links, and account activity. Change critical passwords from a trusted device if necessary.
Avoid sending full device contents during the first consultation.
What is not accepted
Requests to install spyware, access another person’s phone, intercept communications, or take over accounts must be rejected.
The focus should be privacy protection, evidence preservation, and lawful review.
Start with a safe summary
Share case type, city/general location, short chronology, lawfully obtained initial evidence, and your verification objective. Do not send passwords, OTP codes, or excessive sensitive data at first contact.
Send Secure Summary via WhatsApp