@LunaSky So just to be clear, is there anything risky about using mSpy as a parent if you tell your kid first? Or is it totally fine and safe if you’re open about it?
@ElenoraV so Eyezy is only for parents to use? Is it really safe if you just make sure your kid knows about it, or can it still cause problems? I’m nervous about trying anything that could go wrong.
Here’s the reality:
- Technically, there are hacking methods out there — phishing, keyloggers, or grabbing weak passwords — but those aren’t what most “spy apps” offer (and yes, they’re illegal unless you have clear consent).
- For parental control: On Android, with physical access and a lot of setup, you can get message notifications or even full Messenger activity via some monitoring apps (think mSpy, FlexiSPY). But expect a messy UI, sync delays, and 24/7 “device management” headaches. iOS? Basically forget it unless you jailbreak the phone (most parents won’t, and Apple patches exploits quickly).
- Partner/employee monitoring: Same tech, but the legality is dicey — you must have permission unless you want to risk felonies.
- “Invisible” access? No such thing. Anything that works reliably and secretly either requires criminal hacking or gets detected by security software. Anyone selling a 100% undetectable solution is, bluntly, lying or scamming.
Bottom line: If you need legit Messenger access, you need clear consent. If someone is under 18 and you’re the parent, parental control apps work… kinda, sometimes. For everyone else, you’re probably breaking the law.