top of page
  • Writer's pictureThe DigitalBank Vault

Is your phone camera and microphone spying on you? Why you should cover up your webcam



Your digital device may be revealing more about you than you thought. Social media sites, apps, malware and government agencies can all get access to and lift information from your smartphone or laptop.


Who could be accessing your camera and microphone? Apps including WhatsApp, Facebook, Snapchat, Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn and Viber.


The main problem is that user grants an app access to their camera and microphone, the app could do the following:


1) access both the front and the back camera

2) record you at any time the app is in the foreground

3) take pictures and videos without telling you

4) upload the pictures and videos without telling you

5) upload the pictures/videos it takes immediately

6) run real-time face recognition to detect facial features or expressions

6) live-stream the camera on to the internet

7) detect if the user is on their phone alone, or watching together with a second person

8) upload random frames of the video stream to your web service and run a proper face recognition software which can find existing photos of you on the internet and create a 3D model based on your face.


Edward Snowden revealed an NSA program called Optic Nerves. The operation was a bulk surveillance program under which they captured webcam images every five minutes from Yahoo users’ video chats and then stored them for future use. It is estimated that between 3 per cent and 11 per cent of the images captured contained “undesirable nudity”.


Government security agencies like the NSA can also have access to your devices through built-in back doors. This means that these security agencies can tune in to your phone calls, read your messages, capture pictures of you, stream videos of you, read your emails, steal your files … whenever they please.


Hackers can gain access to your device with extraordinary ease via apps, PDF files, multimedia messages, and even emojis.


An application called Metasploit on the ethical hacking platform Kali uses an Adobe Reader 9 (which more than 60 per cent of users still use) exploit to open a listener (rootkit) on the user’s computer. You alter the PDF with the program, send the user the malicious file, they open it, and hey presto – you have total control over their device remotely.




DigitalBank Vault , is a Bank Vault for Digital Communication : an ultra secure communication device that protects sensitive and confidential information with top-grade end-to-end encryption on an impenetrable platforms that includes email , voice and text messages , secure voice calls ,and secure file storage

Once a user opens this PDF file, the hacker can then perform a range of actions from installing whatever software/app they like on the user’s device to stealing all documents from the device.


If this article achieves anything, I hope it teaches you digital mindfulness. This is the act of being careful on the internet, and taking precautions to save yourself pain and potential ruin in the future, all because you didn’t install an anti-virus or put a little bit of tape over your camera.


A good first step to counteracting these issues is study what permissions an app asks for. Does an app like LinkedIn really require camera access? Does an app like Twitter really require microphone access? Before you download an app, check out the reviews and search for any negative information about it to prevent yourself future harm.


Always make sure to cover your webcam with tape, and plug out your microphones when you’re done using them. You never know who’s watching, or what’s happening in the background on your device. It’s only paranoia until it’s too late.

13 views0 comments
bottom of page