Record Private Show

Record Private Show




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Record Private Show
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Is there an app or a way to turn on and begin recording with Siri remotely using Bluetooth
I want to use my phone as recorder without users knowledge. Not only phone calls but also everything around the phone. Any suggestions pls.
Jasmine. The stock recording app works when you lock your phone. Tadaa doesn’t get better than that
What are the two ways that don’t require third-party apps please. I don’t want to have to download anything.
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How To Record Secretly on the iPhone
Smartphones are fantastic playback devices – you can use them to view TV shows, movies, videos, audiobooks, music, games, and more. They are equally good at recording audio and video content from our daily lives. You can use a smartphone to make voice memos to yourself to remind you of important tasks or to take notes, you can record video of special events (or just funny things you see in the neighborhood), and you can even record what’s happening on your phone’s screens. Some of this functionality is built right into your iPhone, while other kinds of tasks will require downloading one or more apps.
When you want to record secretly, things get a little trickier. There are any number of reasons you might want to record something without the subjects of the recording knowing about it; maybe you want to take nannycam video of your child care provider to make sure they aren’t doing anything wrong when you’re not around, or maybe you want to have a video record of everyone who comes up to the front door of your house. The legality and morality of such recording can be clear-cut, but it can also be murky. Much depends on the location, the purpose of the recording, and the amount of privacy that reasonable people can expect in certain circumstances. It is generally legal to record the outside of your home without providing any notification, for example; it’s your private property, people coming up to your home are out in public, and they have no reasonable expectation of privacy in that circumstance. Other circumstances are considerably less clear.
TechJunkie is not a legal advice site and cannot give you advice as to the specific legality of a particular act. For that, you need to consult a lawyer. We can explain some basic concepts, however.
Some of the law on this subject is fairly well-settled; for example, can you legally record phone conversations or in-person conversations. In some states (called one-party states) such a recording is legal if anyone in the conversation knows that it’s being recorded. This counts even if that person is the one making the recording. In other states, recording is legal only if all parties in the conversation are informed that they are being recorded. That’s why the customer-service helpline always informs you that “calls may be recorded or monitored” – so that no matter what the legal regime is in your state, they are covered.
There are 11 states in which all parties must be informed of a recording – California, Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Montana, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania and Washington. In addition, Hawaii is usually a one-party state, but is a two-party state if the recording device is to be located in a private place. Since that’s an almost impossibly vague rule, you should consider Hawaii a two-party state. In most states, advising of the recording is sufficient; only a few places require that everyone involved actually explicitly consent to being recorded.
There is also a federal vs. state consideration. Questions of jurisdiction are almost always very tricky, so again, consult a lawyer before making any important decisions. As a general principle, if the people involved in a conversation are in different states then Federal law applies. If they are in one state, then that state’s law controls. The Federal law is a one-party consent law, while, as seen above, states vary. It is also worth noting that in most states, recording a conversation in a public place is always legal, even without the explicit knowledge of the parties; in public places, people cannot have a reasonable expectation of privacy.
How about recording a police stop, or the conduct of public officials doing official business? Are you allowed to record it, and do you have to inform them of the recording? In general, yes you can record, and no you do not have to inform. Four Federal circuit courts (First, Seventh, Ninth, and Eleventh) have explicitly found that there is a First Amendment right to record public officials in the course of their job. Those courts cover the states of Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, California, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Washington, and Wisconsin. They also cover the US territories of the Northern Marianas Islands, Puerto Rico and Guam. In other states and territories, the right to record government officials has not yet gone to the Federal judiciary for judgment. It is probable that the decisions already reached by four of the nation’s circuit courts would be persuasive in a similar case in an untested state, but that is not guaranteed.
It is crucial to note that this First Amendment right to record does NOT carry over into a right to interfere with the duties of the police, or to otherwise violate applicable laws. You cannot interfere with an arrest, trespass, ignore legitimate police orders intended to control a riot or other civil disturbance, or violate the private rights of any other person.
So you’re at the Phish concert and you are really digging the music. Can you take out your phone and record the show? Yes and no, but mostly no.
Legally, no. There is a Federal law which prohibits the taking of a recording of a public performance (a concert, a play, a musical – whatever) without the explicit permission of the performers, and in many cases, of the owners of the venue.
In practical terms, many performers have tolerated (and in a few exceptional cases, such as the Grateful Dead, encouraged) the taking of bootleg recordings (audio, video, or both) of their shows. This tolerance is not the same thing as it being legal, but in general if you are recording a show where the performers don’t mind, then there isn’t going to be an issue. However, it is strictly forbidden to use such recordings for gain, personal or otherwise. You can get away with recording Phish, maybe, but if you then start trying to sell your Phish bootlegs on Ebay, their lawyers are going to come down on you like the wrath of an angry deity and you will lose, and lose badly, in court. So keep that in mind.
This kind of recording is entirely legal; it’s your phone and you can record whatever you want to record yourself doing. There is built-in functionality in iOS to record your own screen. You have to set it up by enabling it first. Here’s how:
This adds screen recording to your Control Center.
The recorded video will be accessible within the Photos app and you can edit it as usual, either with the phone’s built-in tools or by exporting it to your Mac. There’s no real way to do this “secretly”, but once you’ve hit record and navigated off to do whatever it is you want to record, there’s no indication that a recording is taking place.
You can record video and/or audio with the Camera app on your phone, but of course this will usually be quite obvious to anyone who looks at the phone – they’ll see the Camera app running on a brightly-lit, active screen. If you want to record with the camera and still look subtle, there is a way to do that on some older versions of iOS. Note that this will not work on version 10 or later.
At this point, your iPhone is recording and will continue to do so until you turn it off or it runs out of disk space or battery.
This one is simple. If you want to take pictures or videos without the shutter sound going off, just flip the Mute switch on your iPhone. (It’s the same switch that shuts off the phone’s ringer.) Presto, no more shutter noise.
You may read articles online saying that this is illegal to do. While it is possible that in some jurisdiction somewhere it has been made illegal to take a picture without a shutter sound, my research has been unable to uncover it. It’s simply not true. You can turn your shutter noise off to your heart’s content. If you do see an article which says this is illegal, and which provides a citation to a source other than the author’s opinion, please come back here and leave a comment for us – we are following this issue.
There are a number of apps which will let you secretly record phone calls, videos, and audio. I’m not going to do an exhaustive review of all of them, but here are some that you can use to make recordings privately on your iPhone.
TapeACall Pro does what it says on the box: it lets you record the calls made on an iPhone. This is a highly-rated app and while it does cost $10.99, it lets you record your calls without any hassles and is very reliable.
SP Camera costs $9.99 but it is a very full-featured spy camera app for your iPhone. It lets you secretly capture photos and videos without anyone noticing. The app hides all the camera interface buttons and the viewfinder display, instead showing a fake background image. You can set your phone down in an area as though you had just left it there and it will record for you while it, and you, look totally innocent. The app has a photo timer feature that lets you take still shots every few seconds, as well as a motion detector sensor that will start recording if something moves in the camera’s field of vision. You can also save your videos and photos to a secret, password-protected folder.
Presence is an app that lets you turn any iOS device into a WiFi connected security camera. This lets you set up your old iPhone or iPad anywhere in your home or office and quietly stream video to your mobile device. You can secretly record in any location where you can leave your phone and that has WiFi. Ideal for video surveillance, it also features two-way calling. The base app is free; the premium service adds support for things like home security devices, smart switches, controllable lights, etc.
Do you have any other suggestions for how to record secretly using an iPhone? Share them with us in the comments below!
Need to make calls on your iPhone but want to use a different number? Check out our guide to making spoof calls on your iPhone .
Think someone is screenshotting your text exchange? Find out if someone is screenshotting your texts on iPhone .
Like torrents? We’ve got a tutorial on downloading torrents to your iPhone .
We don’t judge…here’s how you can hide iMessages on your iPhone .
Like movies? Here’s how to install Showbox on your iPhone .
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Decide if you should declare a class or a record .
Declare record types and positional record types.
Substitute your methods for compiler generated methods in records.





















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C# 9 introduces records , a new reference type that you can create instead of classes or structs. C# 10 adds record structs so that you can define records as value types. Records are distinct from classes in that record types use value-based equality . Two variables of a record type are equal if the record type definitions are identical, and if for every field, the values in both records are equal. Two variables of a class type are equal if the objects referred to are the same class type and the variables refer to the same object. Value-based equality implies other capabilities you'll probably want in record types. The compiler generates many of those members when you declare a record instead of a class . The compiler generates those same methods for record struct types.
In this tutorial, you'll learn how to:
You'll need to set up your machine to run .NET 6 or later, including the C# 10 or later compiler. The C# 10 compiler is available starting with Visual Studio 2022 or the .NET 6 SDK .
You define a record by declaring a type with the record keyword, instead of the class or struct keyword. Optionally, you can declare a record class to clarify that it's a reference type. A record is a reference type and follows value-based equality semantics. You can define a record struct to create a record that is a value type. To enforce value semantics, the compiler generates several methods for your record type (both for record class types and record struct types):
Records also provide an override of Object.ToString() . The compiler synthesizes methods for displaying records using Object.ToString() . You'll explore those members as you write the code for this tutorial. Records support with expressions to enable non-destructive mutation of records.
You can also declare positional records using a more concise syntax. The compiler synthesizes more methods for you when you declare positional records:
Data and statistics are among the scenarios where you'll want to use records. For this tutorial, you'll build an application that computes degree days for different uses. Degree days are a measure of heat (or lack of heat) over a period of days, weeks, or months. Degree days track and predict energy usage. More hotter days means more air conditioning, and more colder days means more furnace usage. Degree days help manage plant populations and correlate to plant growth as the seasons change. Degree days help track animal migrations for species that travel to match climate.
The formula is based on the mean temperature on a given day and a baseline temperature. To compute degree days over time, you'll need the high and low temperature each day for a period of time. Let's start by creating a new application. Make a new console application. Create a new record type in a new file named "DailyTemperature.cs":
The preceding code defines a positional record . The DailyTemperature record is a readonly record struct , because you don't intend to inherit from it, and it should be immutable. The HighTemp and LowTemp properties are init only properties , meaning they can be set in the constructor or using a property initializer. If you wanted the positional parameters to be read-write, you declare a record struct instead of a readonly record struct . The DailyTemperature type also has a primary constructor that has two parameters that match the two properties. You use the primary constructor to initialize a DailyTemperature record. The following code creates and initializes several DailyTemperature records. The first uses named parameters to clarify the HighTemp and LowTemp . The remaining initializers use positional parameters to initialize the HighTemp and LowTemp :
You can add your own properties or methods to records, including positional records. You'll need to compute the mean temperature for each day. You can add that property to the DailyTemperature record:
Let's make sure you can use this data. Add the following code to your Main method:
Run your application, and you'll see output that looks similar to the following display (several rows removed for space):
The preceding code shows the output from the override of ToString synthesized by the compiler. If you prefer different text, you can write your own version of ToString that prevents the compiler from synthesizing a version for you.
To compute degree days, you take the difference from a baseline temperature and the mean temperature on a given day. To measure heat over time, you discard any days where the mean temperature is below the baseline. To measure cold over time, you discard any days where the mean temperature is above the baseline. For example, the U.S. uses 65F as the base for both heating and cooling degree days. That's the temperature where no heating or cooling is needed. If a day has a mean temperature of 70F, that day is five cooling degree days and zero heating degree days. Conversely, if the mean temperature is 55F, that day is 10 heating degree days and 0 cooling degree days.
You can express these formulas as a small hierarchy of record types: an abstract degree day type and two concrete types for heating degree days and cooling degree days. These types can also be positional records. They take a baseline temperature and a sequence of daily temperature records as arguments to the primary constructor:
The abstract DegreeDays record is the shared base class for both the HeatingDegreeDays and CoolingDegreeDays records. The primary constructor declarations on the derived records show how to manage base record initialization. Your derived record declares parameters for all the parameters in the base record primary constructor. The base record declares and initializes those properties. The derived record doesn't hide them, but only creates and initializes properties for parameters that aren't declared in its base record. In this example, the derived records don't add new primary constructor parameters. Test your code by adding the following code to your Main method:
You'll get output like the following display:
Your code calculates the correct number of heating and cooling degree days over that period of time. But this example shows why you may want to replace some of the synthesized methods for records. You can declare your own version of any of the compiler-synthesized methods in a record type except the clone method. The clone method has a compiler-generated name and you can't provide a different implementation. These synthesized methods include a copy constructor, the members of the System.IEquatable interface, equality and inequality tests, and GetHashCode() . For this purpose, you'll synthesize PrintMembers . You could also declare your own ToString , but PrintMembers provides a better option for inheritance scenarios. To provide your own version of a synthesized method, the signature must match the synthesized method.
The TempRecords element in the console output isn't useful. It displays the type, but nothing else. You can change this behavior by providing your own implementation of the synthesized PrintMembers method. The signature depends on modifiers applied to the record declaration:
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