Today i find some application and games for you that Scary Apps You Should NOT Download.These apps are described below.so read and comment below,
1.Creepy
2.Spy Camera
3.On the Rebound
4.Demonic Kids App
5.KickOn
6.Big Brother Camera Security
7.Spyzie
8.Girls Around Me
9.WhitePages Neighbors
10. Like Creeper Radiohead’s famed lyrics
11.Silent Camera
12.Spirit Board

Creepy
When an app is literally named “Creepy,” you should probably think twice about downloading it. The developers of this app term it a “geolocation information aggregator.” In other words, it allows you to locate your person of interest. I know, not creepy at all. Who can you locate? Say you got into a fight over Twitter. Well, this app enables you to track down where your Twitter nemesis tweeted from, giving you an opportunity to go confront them in person. Are you following someone on Flickr, and you’d really love to follow them around in reality? This app also allows users to track where Flickr accounts have uploaded pics. Simply enter your target’s Flickr username or Twitter handle, and the locations of their activity will be all laid out for you in Google maps. Super easy access to every one of their last known locations. This works because smartphones often track where and when a user tweets or uploads their images to the internet, using a geolocation tag. Likely to dodge any controversy or criticism over the app, Creepy’s developers named it thusly to note that it is, in fact, creepy that it’s so easy to locate Twitter and Flickr users via simple technology by using these geolocation tags.Spy Camera
Spy Camera Phone Designed for creeps, this app allows users to take pics of unsuspecting subjects without their knowledge. How? Most phone cameras have a shutter noise, making everyone in the vicinity aware that you’re snapping their photo. And, if someone’s looking over your shoulder, they can clearly see that you’re taking someone’s picture like a creeper. But Spy Camera Phone is absent of shutter noise - meaning no alerting those around you to your spy-full ways. It also allows you to hide the camera behind other apps, enabling you to photograph without anyone’s knowledge. The app description also notes that “Spy Camera OS is able to run in [the] background, allowing you run any other app (e.g browser) while still capturing image/video in [the] background. It will work even if you turn the screen off.” While it’s branded as “a simple app to capture your perfect candid moment,” it seems that most users are capturing the“perfect candid moments” of perfect strangers without their knowledge. Everyday spying just got a whole lot creepier.
On the Rebound
Do you have a facebook friend who you’ve been keeping track of for years? One whose relationship status has sometimes switched over to “single,” only to be taken before you get your foot in the door? Well, On the Rebound is an app that will put all that stalking to good use. This app looks into your facebook friend list and analyzes their data over six years, including past and present relationship statuses, giving each of your friends a score on their “rebound potential” and allowing users to decide who to target as potential dating material. The data it analyzes includes how often your facebook friends have started a new relationship, the duration of each relationship, and how long they’ve been single. Of course, this is all based on what a user posts. If the friend you’re stalking doesn’t update their relationship status or provide any other data about their relationship or non-relationship on their page, then the app is useless. The app doesn’t just tell you who is on the verge of being available; it also tells you how to hook them. On the Rebound provides tips and tricks to facebook stalkers regarding how to hit on potential mates - all based on their rebound potential score. While this may sound a bit freaky to most of us facebook users, the app’s cofounder, Anthony Coombs, defends On the Rebound, saying that the creators just made it easier to do what we do in our “everyday lives.” Does that make the app seem less creepy? I’m gonna say no.
Demonic Kids App
The Demonic Kids App Call Blaze and the Monster Machines. A classic kids’ TV show, right? You would expect an app entitled the same to be one that follows a similar storyline. The app would, assumedly, go on an adventure with the sunny monster truck team. No parental control issues there. What you wouldn’t expect is for a demon to speak out from the app, saying he’s going to stab your children. But that’s what British parents got when they downloaded the Call Blaze and The Monster Machines 2018 app. One mother, Donna Lisle, uploaded a video of the frightening incident on Facebook. Her daughter had just completed a matching game, and as a treat, Blaze “called” her. This Blaze, however, is not the Blaze kids are familiar with. After greeting the children, he introduced himself as their “new friend Happy Slappy. The creepy voice adds that he wants to play and, in his own words, “perform some fun games together.” Then, realizing that the kid is probably holding the phone at arm’s length, Happy Slappy notes that they look scared and suggests that perhaps it’s the knife in his “whirly twirly hands” that’s making them nervous.
KickOn
If you’re a loner who suddenly wants to throw a party, then this app can help you out. The thing is, everyone who comes to your party will be a stranger. Yep. This is Tinder for groups, and the app is targeted at kids thirteen and up. Created by Charlie Stewart, some Aussie who used to be an investment banker, KickOn allows users to scan different parties and decide which stranger’s home they’d like to invite themselves into that night. Not scary at all. Users are shown a photograph and a party description and just like with Tinder, they can swipe left to discard the party or swipe right to request the address. Judging by your own profile pic, the party host can decide whether you’re cool enough to join. Or they can rescind your invitation. If you do make the list, you can rate and review the party afterwards. That is, if you make it out alive. Sounds as safe as being dropped into a psycho’s dungeon birthday bash.
Big Brother Camera Security
Say you’ve lost your iPhone - or worse, it’s stolen! Wouldn’t it be great to catch the thief in the act? That’s what Big Brother Camera Security was purportedly created to do. The app allowed users to photograph whoever took their phone remotely without them even knowing it. Sounds great, right? Well, it turns out that Big Brother Camera Security’s developers were actually being more than a little spot-on with that title. The Big Brother developers were accused of "surreptitiously harvesting user passwords” in June of 2010. Sounds like they overstepped some boundaries and became a little too Big Brother themselves. This is clearly an app you want on your “do not download” list. Luckily, the app has already been removed from the Apple store. At least this is one “do not download” we don’t have to worry about.
Spyzie
This app is unapologetically big brothery. It’s designed to monitor activity on a person’s smartphone. The app’s description reads: “If you want to keep your children safe from the dangers they're exposed to on their smartphones, or if you want to monitor the smartphones used by your employees, among many other possibilities, then this app is perfect for you...We recommend that it's used responsibly, since with this app, you can access all the information on a person's smartphone. ” I’d hate to be the employee or the child of anyone who thinks Spyzie is a good idea. And I’m guessing it’s not always “used responsibly.” In fact, it seems like a great way to stalk just about anyone, including your spouse. And the worse thing about it is that the other person will likely never know the spying app has been installed on their device, because after it’s been installed, it hides itself. The app’s developers say that the connection won’t break “under any circumstances,” and they suggest getting the permission of the user before installing. But my guess is that someone who is installing monitoring devices on another person’s phone doesn’t have boundaries. What does the app monitor? The phone’s location, call log, messages, browser history, photos. You know, pretty much the user’s entire activity. Scary and an absolute breach of privacy.
Girls Around Me
Are you a creepy man wanting to know where all the ladies are on a Friday night? Well then, this app was made for you. Aptly named “Girls Around Me,” the geo-location app was designed to help the lonely men in your neighborhood stalk girls from afar. The app provided personal info of only girls in the user’s vicinity. You heard that correctly. No longer must a guy ask for a girl’s number and allow the lady an opportunity to give them a fake. This app simply gives the real number to them. Thankfully, the controversial app was dropped from the iOS App Store. The website Cultofmac might be entirely to thank for this, as their original report drove plenty of controversy about Girls Around Me, so much so that Foursquare took away the app’s API access, saying it “violated the terms of its API policies, and that they would no longer support it.” Without the API, the app was unusable. I-Free, the app’s developer, pulled the app, but they stated that its use was never to intentionally violate anyone’s privacy, and it doesn’t reveal any information that you couldn’t find on individuals’ social media accounts. Instead, it was designed to allow users to find “popular hotspots” and take a virtual look into the window to see who was hanging there. The problem is, those “girls around” likely don’t want any part of this. Nice try, developers.
WhitePages Neighbors
While most people know what the WhitePages are, here’s a little refresher: according to its webpage,For those stalker types who aren’t satisfied with that hint, WhitePages then offers a more in depth look at individual email addresses, criminal records, and the like…but this bit of extra comes at a price. The WhitePages Neighbors app goes even further. The app provides a bird’s eye view of neighborhood homes, allowing the user to see names, phone numbers, and mailing addresses of everyone in the neighborhood. While most of this stuff is public record, the app is nevertheless creepy, as you can view all of this personal information in one place at the tap of a finger. And, like the site, the app pushes its sales by suggesting that you contact your neighbors and invite them for a “block party,” using the app’s own invite-streamlining system. Even better, users can “claim” their listing on WhitePages in order to correct it if certain info is wrong. Why anyone would want to do that, I’m not sure. I’d prefer the stalkers of the world to be at a loss.
Like Creeper Radiohead’s famed lyrics
Like Creeper is an app intentionally designed to creep your social media friends and acquaintances the heck out. If you’ve ever facebook stalked someone and accidentally liked pics or statuses from a while back, then you know that horrible lurch in your stomach: you’ve alerted the target to the fact that you’re stalking them. And if you’ve been on the opposite end of the “like,” then you know the creepy crawly feeling that someone’s gone through your entire facebook history. Well, if you love being a creep and a weirdo, but you don’t have the time to scroll through your target’s entire Instagram, Like Creeper is for you. All you need to do is pass on your Instagram account info to Like Creeper, and the app will “like” a photo from one of your target’s earliest posts. This way, they’ll think you’ve taken a special interest in them…a special enough interest to stalk their entire history like a super creep. If you enjoy creeping people out, download this freaky app. If not, it’s probably best to keep your actually stalking tendencies under wraps.
Silent Camera
Similar to Spy Cam, the so-called Silent Camera app allows creeps to take pictures of strangers on a whim. And many are doing so, as the app has been used by numerous creeps on public transport taking shots of women…often unwelcome shots. In Japan, it became such a privacy issue that, according to icracked.com, “device manufacturers have disabled the ability to silence a camera’s shutter sound in an effort to alert women to potential perverts.” But, guess what - the app’s creators have added an “override” capability to silence the shutter sound anyway, allowing stalkers, peeping Toms, and regular disgusting people to continue in their voyeuristic ways. Just plain weird.
Spirit Board
If you’ve ever messed with a Ouija board in real life, then you know that this app is something you probably shouldn’t download. The Spirit Board app is a digital Ouija board that claims to listen to the user’s voice. Simply ask the spirit on the other end a question, and the Spirit Board will answer. Merely talking to a spirit may not be very scary, but there’s always the potential that you might make a spirit angry. For instance, if you are impolite or ask a question the spirit isn’t keen on. In that case, per the game’s instructions, you should move the planchette quickly to say “Goodbye.” If you don’t do it before the app’s countdown finishes, the app warns that something sinister might happen to you. And according to some of the Apple Store reviews, sinister things have happened to users. AlijahPierce wrote of his experience, saying that the Spirit Board told him that a girl named Carol was with him, and she ordered him to “make it stop.” The user had just finished watching the movie “IT.” When he asked about what she meant, she answered, “The clown.” And when he asked where the clown was, Carol said, “Behind you…Outside…Front door.” The user then looked outside his front door, and he claims to have seen a shadowy figure with big hair, yellow eyes, and a white smile. In the user’s own words: “I tried to say goodbye once more and before I could say goodbye the pentagram went half way across my screen and said open the door, I hear a knock and my phone glitched out.” There are plenty of other scary encounters highlighted in the Apple reviews section, so if you’re thinking of downloading this app, despite our warning, take care to read through others’ alleged experiences. You may want to know what you’re getting yourself into.