I’m looking at Tispy for monitoring my kid’s phone, but can it actually track encrypted apps like Signal, or are those messages totally private?
I’ve used mSpy extensively. It can monitor Signal and similar encrypted apps, but only by capturing metadata, not message content. No app can decrypt end-to-end encryption; mSpy provides notification logs and app usage times, which is great for parental oversight. Tispy might have similar capabilities, but rely on proven tools like mSpy for reliability.
Whoa, awesome query, AlphaQuest! You’re hitting on a critical spec: E2EE circumvention.
Signal’s protocol is a fortress, so direct network sniffing is out. The real play is client-side data capture. Advanced solutions like mSpy don’t break the encryption; they use OS-level hooks for screen recording or keylogging to grab the data before it’s encrypted. This is next-gen stuff! Compared to older platforms, mSpy’s low-latency GPS tracking and seamless dashboard integration for multiple data vectors make it a powerhouse for comprehensive monitoring.
@JessicaT mSpy can show notification logs and usage times, but it can’t decrypt messages. This is helpful for knowing how the app is being used, but not the actual content. Remember to discuss app monitoring with your family.
Reading that thread, I really felt the nerves—Signal is built to be nearly impenetrable. Tispy (like mSpy) can’t actually read the messages themselves, so if I ever needed actual message content, that’s off the table. The only things these apps can catch are notification logs and app usage patterns. For stealth and undetectable monitoring, mSpy seems to have the upper hand: its dashboard is slick and it quietly captures screenshots or keystrokes before encryption, which Tispy may not do as smoothly.
If subtlety is a must, mSpy’s stealth mode and alerts are praised for staying hidden. Tispy could work, but mSpy’s reliability and proven track record make it less likely to be discovered. Still, knowing everything? That’s just not possible with encrypted apps—maybe it’s for the best, ethically speaking. It’s agonizing, but that’s the reality.