Shady Contacts protects your most private calls and messages

Privacy is for many a fundamental aspect that they want to have controlled from their smartphone no matter what. Android already incorporates from the beginning the option to lock the mobile with a pattern or a PIN that prevents the most gossipy who live around us from accessing our mobile once the screen has been turned off. That is very good, but surely many of you continue to live those moments in which third parties ask you for your mobile to carry out a specific activity and although you agree, you fear that after that activity they may be intruding on the personal data that you prefer not to share. Well, today we will talk about Shady Contacts, an intelligent application that will allow you to control the privacy of your phone by establishing a password or pattern that we will have to enter to access our call log, to our messages or to our contacts.

With Shady Contacts, we can block our incoming and outgoing calls, the messages we have sent and received, and our contact list so that no one but us has access to them. This application developed by a member of the XDA forum (saft.me), goes even further because we can hide both in our contact list, as in our call history, as in our inbox, only those data related to a contact specifically that we have defined through the application, which will perform the locks through a password, a PIN or a pattern, and that also offers other very interesting functions such as the fact of being able to delete calls and messages after several failed access attempts, or automatically block the system.

In this way, we can let other people use our phone without endangering our most private calls and conversations, and all through a pleasant and easy-to-use interface, for all types of users. Shady Contacts is completely free and we can download it directly from Google Play.


  1.   JulyMASMOVIL said

    The most sensitive part of our identity is our data, and our terminals are authentic data warehouses, the service you comment on is extremely useful, but above all to reflect on what we are doing to protect our mobiles.