Not to mention if a specific entity were to go after a specific target they could contract for a custom keylogger to be written that wouldn't be known to any scanners.
Installing keylogger on mac software#
There are hundreds of different commercial keylogging software applications readily available and inexpensive, plus there are less known and better written ones from large entities such as foreign governments (and our government), large corporations and rogue individual hackers.
![installing keylogger on mac installing keylogger on mac](https://www.hwsuite.com/static/img/free-keylogger-mac.png)
There is also the very expensive Wetstone Gargoyle which does a fair job at an impossible task. I know of 'Spy-Reveal' and 'Spy-Cop' which are both written by the same individual programmer but I don't see how one poorly-funded individual could possibly keep up with the hundreds of malware apps out there changing every day. There are very few applications specifically written to detect keystroke loggers. You may catch a spy who isn't particularly sophisticated or careful and is using a well known spyware such as Spector Pro. You can make an image of your hard drive and scan it with Windows based scanners as well. Generally you would use a combination of anti-virus, anti-malware, anti-spyware and anti-rootkit applications. To sort of answer your question, this is a difficult thing to do. Irrelvant submissions will be pruned in an effort towards tidiness. Vote based on the quality of the content.
![installing keylogger on mac installing keylogger on mac](https://celltrackingapps.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/etrecheck-e1593085654684.jpg)
Topics include digital forensics, incident response, malware analysis, and more. This subreddit is not limited to just the computers and encompasses all media that may also fall under digital forensics (e.g., cellphones, video, etc.). The field is the application of several information security principles and aims to provide for attribution and event reconstruction following forth from audit processes. A community dedicated towards the branch of forensic science encompassing the recovery and investigation of material found in digital devices, often in relation to computer crime.