Wickr gives iPhone messages military-grade protection

New application to give users of Apple gadgets uncrackable communications that can be made to self-destruct

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AFPPTI San Francisco
Last Updated : Jan 24 2013 | 1:49 AM IST
I / San Francisco June 30, 2012, 14:19 IST

Celebrity scandals fuelled by leaked text messages or emailed images have inspired a new application to give users of Apple gadgets uncrackable communications that can be made to self-destruct.

The Wickr app has been downloaded thousands of times since the software crafted for iPhones, iPads, and iPod touch devices hit the virtual shelves of Apple's online App Store on Wednesday.

The San Francisco-based startup behind the software is working on versions of Wickr for smartphones or tablets powered by Google-backed Android software.

"We think communications should be flipped on its head," said startup co-founder Nico Sell, a key behind-the-scenes figure at the infamous Def Con hacker gathering that takes place annually in Las Vegas.

"Now by default, all our personal and business communications are traceable," she explained. "We think that by default your communications should be untraceable."

Wickr was billed as a secure social network where people could send text or voice messages as well as pictures or snippets of video with security in place to thwart snoops.

Wickr encrypts files end-to-end and, unlike typical email services, so no copies are left to linger on computer servers used to route messages.

Wickr messages and their contents are set to self-destruct, with senders getting to decide how long files continue to exist after being opened.

"After you view a message or picture, the application erases the forensics on the phone so no one could go back and find a trace of that," said co-founder Robert Statica, an engineering professor specialising security technology.

"If someone wants to recover the data forensically, all they will get is garbage."

Statica, who teaches at the New Jersey Institute of Technology, was at a San Francisco cafe with Sell last year when talk turned to headline-grabbing stories about athletes or film stars vexed by exposed text or email messages.

"We were laughing so hard that we almost got kicked out of the cafe," Statica recalled. "Before we left, we decided that (Wickr) was the way to go."

The startup's founders include military network security veteran Kara Coppa and computer crime investigations specialist Christopher Howell.

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First Published: Jun 30 2012 | 2:19 PM IST

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