Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

Swytch: Now Unfaithful Lovers Can Cheat On Partner With This Free App

Darpan News Desk IANS, 04 Jan, 2016 01:34 PM
    Unfaithful lovers can use a new app that allows them to keep multiple phone numbers on their existing smartphone and cheat on their partners.
     
    The app, called Swytch, allows users to have up to five additional mobile numbers on their existing smartphone nullifying the need of keeping two mobiles to orchestrate their double lives, The Mirror reported here on Sunday.
     
    Chris Michael, CEO and co-founder of the app, said when developing the app it was inevitable it "could also attract the unfaithful ones".
     
    "If having access to more than one number makes it easier for people to have affairs, then it happened a long time ago when Pay As You Go SIM cards became available," Micheal said.
     
    "Swytch makes it possible for people to have multiple numbers on their existing mobile phone, and while this may assist people who have already decided to have affairs, I cannot believe that would be a factor in their decision to start one," he said.
     
    Swytch allows the user to call or text somebody after simply selecting a number they wish to use.
     
    The app has been designed to help people who wish to keep separate business and personal communications on one device. One can also keep main number private by using temporary numbers for online activities.
     
    "While building it for people who use online dating services, we realised it could also attract the unfaithful ones, but they will definitely not be the users getting the greatest value out of Swytch," Micheal added.
     
    "We focus on helping people who were displaying their main number online and getting spam calls or being harassed, because they did not have a proper alternative," Micheal explained.
     
    The app is available for free download and is available on iPhone and Android phones.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Wireless cooling: Magnets to keep your fridge cool

    Wireless cooling: Magnets to keep your fridge cool
    Magnets may soon act as wireless cooling agents for your refrigerators, laptops and other devices if a theory propounded by researchers at Massachusetts...

    Wireless cooling: Magnets to keep your fridge cool

    Human-induced water vapour next climate threat

    Human-induced water vapour next climate threat
    The rising levels of water vapour in the upper troposphere - a key amplifier of global warming - owing to greenhouse gases will intensify climate change...

    Human-induced water vapour next climate threat

    Facebook favoured for background check on prospective partner: Survey

    Facebook favoured for background check on prospective partner: Survey
    Almost fifty percent unmarried people in India use social networking site Facebook to conduct a background check on their prospective partner...

    Facebook favoured for background check on prospective partner: Survey

    2.5 bn smartphone users globally by 2015: US report

    2.5 bn smartphone users globally by 2015: US report
    Nearly 2.5 billion people or 35 percent of the global population is expected to use smartphones by the end of 2015, says the latest report of US-based industry...

    2.5 bn smartphone users globally by 2015: US report

    New technique to build 'invisible' materials with light

    New technique to build 'invisible' materials with light
    A new method of building materials using light could one day enable technologies that are often considered the realm of science fiction, such as invisibility ...

    New technique to build 'invisible' materials with light

    Device to help neuroscientists analyse 'big data'

    Device to help neuroscientists analyse 'big data'
    In the era of unprecedented quantities of information via web, mobile and other internet-based operations, here comes a new device that can help neuroscientists make sense of the "big data"....

    Device to help neuroscientists analyse 'big data'