There are many different spy bugs that
can be used to listen in on conversations.
These can be bugs that you plant at a
home, or listening devices that you wear
on your person (or have someone else wear).
But no matter how you use spy bugs, it
is possible to glean useful information
with them, whether you are an amateur,
a professional, or are just looking for
the truth.
The most common spy bugs are bugs that
use a radio frequency to transmit the
sounds around them. These bugs may be
placed inside a home or office to catch
conversations held in a room, or they
may be hooked into a phone. When hooked
into a phone, they can listen to both
sides of a conversation over a phone line.
Additionally, it is possible to wear these
listening devices hidden on the body in
what look regular items (pens, lighters,
hats, etc.). The radio frequency is transmitted
to a location where it can be heard, usually
with no more than a regular FM radio.
Other spy bugs make use of ways that
tap into the line itself and do not send
radio transmissions. These types of bugs
are harder to detect. A wiretap might
fall into this category of direct bugs,
as may a soft tap that makes use of computer
software to listen to phone conversations.
The best spy bugs, however, are the portable
kind that go with the subject and allow
you to phone in.
While it is possible to plant radio transmitting
spy bugs on a person to go with her or
him, it is far more practical to use a
device that they trust, and that is unlikely
to be shed or lost. This is a cell phone.
Of course, spy bugs in the form of cell
phones can only be used to learn information
from people you know, and whom you might
reasonably be expected to give a cell
phone. A Spy Matrix Spy Phone is really
a portable bug that lets you listen to
conversations that make use of the cell
phone as well as whatever is going on
in the room at the time.
When you need to hear what is being said,
the best things to use are spy bugs.
(c) 2005 Copyright www.spyassociates.com.
This article is about: Spy Bugs.
This article was posted on October
10, 2005