PogoWasRight.org

Menu
  • About
  • Privacy
Menu

Sex texting love rats on notice

Posted on October 25, 2009July 3, 2025 by Dissent

It’s a technological breakthrough that will worry cheating partners – secret text messages can now be retrieved from mobilephones five years after they were deleted.

Shaped like an ice hockey puck, the XRY forensic device mines old SIM cards for long-erased nuggets of personal information.

Kim Khor is director of Khor Wills & Associates – which handles mobile forensics for Australian police, private companies and suspicious individuals keen to catch wayward spouses. He says old text messages can be easily found.

Read more in the Daily Telegraph.

No related posts.

Category: MiscSurveillance

Post navigation

← Twitter finally removing deleted tweets from search results
Privacy, free speech, and the PATRIOT Act: First and Fourth Amendment limits on national security letters →

Now more than ever

Search

Contact Me

Email: [email protected]

Mastodon: Infosec.Exchange/@PogoWasRight

Signal: +1 516-776-7756

Categories

Recent Posts

  • DeleteMyInfo Wins 2025 Digital Privacy Excellence Award from Internet Safety Council
  • TikTok Loses First Appeal Against £12.7M ICO Fine, Faces Second Investigation by DPC
  • German court offers EUR 5000 compensation for data breaches caused by Meta
  • How to Build on Washington’s “My Health, My Data” Act
  • Department of Justice Subpoenas Doctors and Clinics Involved in Performing Transgender Medical Procedures on Children
  • Google Settles Privacy Class Action Over Period Tracking App
  • ICE Is Searching a Massive Insurance and Medical Bill Database to Find Deportation Targets

RSS Recent Posts on DataBreaches.net

  • Qilin claims attack on Accu Reference Medical Laboratory. It wasn’t the lab’s first data breach.
  • Louis Vuitton hit by data breach in Türkiye, over 140,000 users exposed
  • Infosys McCamish Systems Enters Consent Order with Vermont DFR Over Cyber Incident
  • Obligations under Canada’s data breach notification law
  • German court offers EUR 5000 compensation for data breaches caused by Meta
©2025 PogoWasRight.org. All rights reserved.