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WTMP — Who touched my phone? icon

WTMP — Who touched my phone?

SVDsoftware

Version
6.5.2
Size
6.5 MB
License
Free
Updated
May 22, 2026

Screenshots

About WTMP — Who touched my phone?

Discover who touched your phone with WTMP — Who touched my phone?, the device security app that captures activity when your device is unlocked without authorization.

Your phone contains your most personal information. When it's out of your sight, you need to know who's accessing it. WTMP runs invisibly in the background, using your front camera to record unauthorized unlock attempts and document exactly who tried to use your device, when they did it, and what they accessed.

Simple setup means real protection. Activate the app, press the button, lock your device, and let it work silently. Every time someone attempts to unlock your phone—whether successfully or not—WTMP captures a photo report and logs which apps were launched. You get a complete timeline of activity, so nothing goes unnoticed.

Review your security reports anytime. Browse through photos and app activity logs within the app to see the full picture of who accessed your device and what they did. For added peace of mind, sync your reports to the cloud so your evidence is always backed up and accessible.

WTMP uses Device Administrator permissions to monitor unlock attempts with precision. The app requires this permission to detect both correct and incorrect unlock tries, ensuring comprehensive monitoring. Setup takes seconds, and you maintain full control—simply deactivate Device Administrator rights before uninstalling.

Protect what matters most. WTMP — Who touched my phone? gives you visibility and accountability over your device's security.

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Captures photos of unauthorized unlock attempts for visual evidence
  • Logs which apps were accessed during unauthorized sessions
  • Cloud sync backs up security reports for remote access
  • Simple activation process with minimal setup friction

Cons

  • Requires Device Administrator permissions, which grants broad system control
  • Front camera recording drains battery during background monitoring
  • Photos and activity logs stored locally may consume significant device storage
  • Cannot distinguish between intentional family access and actual unauthorized use

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