New York Attorney General Fines Vendor for Illegally Promoting Spyware

The New York Office of the Attorney General has announced punitive measures against Patrick Hinchy and 16 of the companies he owns, for illegally promoting spyware.





Since 2011, Hinchy has owned and operated numerous companies, including the 16 investigated by the New York OAG, for selling and promoting spyware targeting Android and iOS devices, including Auto Forward, Easy Spy, DDI Utilities, Highster Mobile, PhoneSpector, Surepoint, and TurboSpy.





Once installed on victim devices, the spyware would collect and exfiltrate data such as call logs, text messages, photos, videos, emails, Chrome browser data, location, and data from messaging and social media applications, including WhatsApp, Skype, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter.





The spyware was sold to ‘customers’ looking to spy on their spouse, colleagues, or other individuals, and was installed on the victims’ devices without their knowledge and without notifying them of the data collection and exfiltration activities.





Furthermore, in order to access certain types of information, the spyware required ‘root’ or ‘jailbreak’ access. Some of the spyware also allowed customers to remotely activate the infected device’s camera or microphone, for spying or eavesdropping purposes.





The collected data was being transmitted to servers owned by Hinchy’s companies, and users of the spyware apps could access it through a web dashboard that also allowed customers to activate device cameras, unlock the victim devices, and hide or erase the spyware from those devices.





Collected data, the New York OAG has discovered, was being transmitted in an insecure manner, which exposed it to potential cyberattacks and snooping.





The investigation conducted by authorities has revealed that Hinchy and his companies focused heavily on promoting the spyware and instructing cu ..

Support the originator by clicking the read the rest link below.