This depends first and foremost on the particular private investigator and what you consider to be an invasion of privacy. So yes, a private investigator could invade a person's privacy (although such actions may not necessarily be legal).
FBI AGENTS AND PRIVATE INVESTIGATORS!!!!!!!!!!!!
A touch screen cell phone may not recallibrate itself in a couple years of owning the cell phone. When trying to tap on the icon, it may tap another icon. The calliberation on it is terrible.
It would be illegal for an employer or anyone else to tap your cell phone since lawfully there is no law on tapping cell phones. However the technology is readily available for them to tap your cell phone, but they can't legally use it against you.
on a work phone yes but it is highly against the law to tap a home phone
Tapping a phone line requires a warrant.
It depends on the situation and it depends on the jurisdiction. I will answer as a PI in Georgia. It is legal in Georgia to record a conversation if you are a party to the conversation. So the phone call could be recorded if the PI or the PI's client (or another consenting party of the conversation) gives their permission. It is illegal for anyone (PI or not) to record a convesation if they are not a party in that conversation.
No you can not. Its the only mobile phone that you can not tap
So, tap "Menu" on your screen, and then tap "Settings and Tools". After that, tap "Phone Settings", and then tap "Security".
Only if they have obtained a federal wiretap warrant from a federal judge.
that depends witch company your cell is from and then that depends if you have the charge or not. if you do not your phone may not last a day with out the charger and some times some cell company charge your phone before they put it in the box. 740-739-7625
In settings their should be a button called calibration. That will adjust the tap on your phone
Yes you can tap an iphone but, too hard. It will break if you do that.
Go to your menu, settings, then connectivity. Tap 'Create', and then put in your internet information. That worked on mine, and mine's AT&T.