China Is Installing Spyware on Tourists' Phones The app is forcefully installed at border crossings and collects all your personal information.

By Matthew Humphries

This story originally appeared on PCMag

via PC Mag

Visitors to Xinjiang in northwest China are experiencing a nasty surprise in the form of a spyware app that's being forcefully installed on their phones.

As Vice reports, tourists are being stopped at Chinese borders in the Xinjiang region and having their smartphones seized. Border guards then install an app called Fengcai or BXAQ, which proceeds to collect all personal information including text messages, calendar entries, phone contacts, call logs and a list of the installed apps. All the data is then sent to a remote server for review.

As well as collecting personal information, Fengcai has been found to check the content against a list of 73,000 items flagged as being suspicious or worth further investigation. Some of these items are legitimate, for example, instructions on how to make weapons, but then the list also includes books written in Arabic, audio of the Quran being read, and documents relating to the Dalai Lama.

For now, it's thought Fengcai only works with Android smartphones and is added to a device through side-loading. However, iPhones are also seized and border guards plug them into a handheld device. It seems likely the guards have access to a device capable of bypassing security and grabbing all the personal information from an iOS phone, like the device Cellebrite supplies to law enforcement agencies.

Fengcai was developed by Ninjing FiberHome StarrySky Communication Development Company Ltd. and then distributed by Chinese authorities. As you'd expect, neither is willing to talk about the use of spyware and forced smartphone seizures. So if you do intend on visiting the Xinjiang region, it's best to leave your smartphone at home, or at the very least run the best security solution you can on it.

Matthew Humphries

Senior Editor

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2025.

Leadership

I Blew an Audition with Robert De Niro — But the Surprising Lesson Now Helps Me Crush Every High-Stakes Moment

A failed audition with Robert De Niro became the wake-up call that taught me how to own the room — and how you can too.

Productivity

You Can't Beat Procrastination With Time Management or Productivity Hacks. Here's What Actually Works.

Procrastination isn't about time — it's about emotion. Here's how to work with your brain to navigate emotions and overcome procrastination.

Starting a Business

I Sold My Company to Snapchat for $54 Million — These 5 Takeaways Still Guide Me Today

Building something people genuinely want and proving demand with real traction before chasing investors is what attracts the right buyers.

Business News

Mark Zuckerberg's Meta Keeps Suspending Mark Zuckerberg, Esq., From Facebook — and Now He's Suing

Mark Zuckerberg, an attorney in Indianapolis, Indiana, says Meta keeps shutting down his paid business pages.