Does anyone know what the hell this sentence means this is what happens when I try to sync with the target phone I get this error message: google notification service: push server error: googlenotificationservice: missing application instance identifier. Please anyone tell me why this is preventing me from receiving data from the target phone, and thank you in advance.
Your device has not connected to our server in several days. If you can confirm that the device is indeed on and does have internet connection, then this leads us to believe that FlexiSPY is no longer alive on the phone.
Yes I'm sorry thank you Dakota. I installed it myself I had a chance to look over her phone last night to make sure everything concerning security and google google play was all checked correctly, I think it was all correct however, I couldn't find flexispy anywhere on her phone I really didnt know what the name was as it appeared on the phone no visable app eigther, however what I did see was the same screan that I used to install it the one that you check if you have a licenses right before you install it that was on her phone as well ,I couldn't believe my eyes and also Dacota while I have you here she called me today and said her phone all of a sudden was screwing up screan turning blue having trouble staying on line could that have something to do with flexi spy? Thank you very much sir.
Actually ALL is not well I cant get, web activity, ims, app activity, voip recording ,spy call, and the spy call is the reason I switched from auto forward to flexi which I never had any trouble with I really cant wait untill my 3 months is over so I can go back to your adds are really misleading .
Dissatisfied with this app. It claims to offer many features. I only get location (after the fact, cannot catch someone in the middle of what they are doing), Keylogger doesn't work most of the time - very blotchy, VoIP doesn't work, Video's that are 30 seconds long are 'too big to download', wallpaper, app activity.. Two weeks after I purchased the extreme package with professional installation - a new version of Flexispy was released that requires uninstall - then reinstall which is another $50 after spending $150-160 USD already. Another thing to consider, people usually keep their phones with them and if they're being sneaky ALWAYS keep their phone with them. It makes the software update even more difficult. 1. Expensive package without all the features - if it wasn't installed and set up correctly that's not my fault since I paid for professional installation..... 2. Customer service won't tell me how approximately how often there are updates 3. There are sync issues. Where's the APP in the Appstore? Site says there is one which I cannot find in neither apple play or google play. I have these two phones and cannot find the app at all.
Flexispy was working fine for the first few days. I keep the target device with me to make sure all works before passing it to the target. In the dashboard the Resync function is not there. When it was working during a live listening call when I hung up the target phone beeps loud 4 times. Why would the resync option be missing from the dashboard ?
So, it is a known limitation that on certain iOS + devices models, after the spycall has ended, the phone can play one, two, or three beeps. That beep would come from the earpiece of the phone, not the speakers.
I have had the Target in my possession the entire time. It was not factory reset and there is no antivirus so thus it lost jailbreak. What causes this to happen. Tech told me not to restart the phone for 24 hours. So there must be more post installation tips to follow in order to prevent this. I did not restart the phone but the battery did die. If Target ever restarts the phone or if the battery dies will this cause loss of jailbreak. These are events that are certain to happen.
Where do I locate resync and how do I activate recent Target phone turned off on the 17th December 2002 cannot put it back on I'm not sure how to do it please advise me how to do it I can get on target phone Samsung Galaxy A20
On three occasions this week, I asked a FlexiSpy salesperson a simple question: If I wanted to, could I use their spyware to snoop on my wife's cellphone without her knowing? The answer each time was yes. When asked if it was legal, they responded with a canned disclaimer explaining it was necessary to get the permission of the target. But what if I didn't want my wife to know? They could help me anyway. If I wanted to break the law, I could use their $68-a-month app and they'd walk me through the 5-10 minute process of installing FlexiSpy on my wife's phone, hoovering up all her calls, WhatsApp and Facebook messages, and her location, whilst hiding the software so she'd never know.
That never happened. The enquiries were to find out how scrupulous FlexiSpy was and if it might be willing to help customers even if their actions were in breach of the U.S. Wiretap Act, which outlaws any surreptitious spying on another's communications without their permission. Procurement of another person to intercept comms is also deemed illegal under the statute. And outside of legal problems with spyware, there are clear moral issues: often such spyware is used in abusive relationships. In 2014, NPR surveyed 70 women's shelters; 85 per cent were working with victims who were tracked via GPS, or what's commonly called "spouseware."
Not that any of the three FlexiSpy salespeople appeared to care much about the Wiretap Act or the potential for abuse. Even though I started each conversation telling the FlexiSpy salesperson I was a FORBES reporter, they were happy to offer suggestions about how one could install the app without permission of the target. One said I could "sneak to get her phone" and then install, a process that FlexiSpy would guide me through. He sought to allay any fears about getting caught, noting there was no icon and it would operate silently.
I asked another, what if I didn't get my wife's permission? "That is okay, she will not know that the software is in the phone," the salesperson responded. I moved on to morals. Wasn't it bad to spy on your wife? "It is not bad. You just want to know the truth," they said.
Towards the end of my third conversation, the online chat feature mysteriously crashed and then disappeared entirely from the FlexiSpy site. It has not returned since. The company didn't respond to an enquiry about why.
I handed screenshots from all my conversations with the sales reps to FlexiSpy. It claimed I had pressed the salespeople "to force an unnatural response." "To their credit, most of our support staff answers reiterated that they could only help you with installations on your own phone, and that for legal advice, you should consult your attorney," a spokesperson said.
Despite that, FlexiSpy is looking into why I received responses that indicated they would help me install the spyware on another's phone without them knowing. "We do take your comments seriously, so we will examine the response of our staff, and provide a full analysis of what happened, and make improvements where required, but I can assure you that our staff are trained to make sure that they only answer questions on the product features, because they all know that they cannot answer questions on legality, or provide advice for illegal use cases," the spokesperson added.
Suspicions that FlexiSpy might be willing to help jealous husbands spy on their wives came from the firm's own marketing. Whilst its competitors have toned down their marketing in fear of U.S. government action, Thailand-based FlexiSpy has continued to promote its tools for spying on a partner. On its Twitter feed last month, the company suggested it might be time to investigate a suspect partner:
FlexiSpy was founded in Thailand by Atir Raihan in 2006. He had not responded to multiple requests for interviews over the last year, even amidst concerns about its risqu marketing. His Facebook profile shows a middle-aged man who has a penchant for dressing up like a rockstar (his page was no longer publicly available after this article was published), and a UK Companies House record for FlexiSpy's parent company, Vervata, revealed his age: 53.
His LinkedIn page indicated he'd moved on from FlexiSpy to other monitoring services aimed at businesses wanting to keep tabs on staff, though one ex-employee said he still headed up the firm. He appears to have his fingers in other pies too, registering a number of other domains for spyware businesses, including thaispybangkok.com in 2013 and filipinaspy.com in 2015.
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