Tel Aviv-based Rayzone Group is selling a nifty little gadget called InterApp that can leverage outdated mobile devices and intercept and extract information from nearby smartphones.

As Razyone describes its product, "InterApp is a game-changing tactical intelligence system, developed for intelligence and law enforcement agencies, enabling them to stealthily collect information from the cloud using smartphone application vulnerabilities."

InterApp can allow its operators to break into nearby smartphones that have their WiFi connection open, and then, employing a diverse arsenal of security vulnerabilities, gain root permission on devices and exfiltrate information to a tactical server.

InterApp can steal passwords and data from targeted smartphones

According to Rayzone, InterApp can steal a user's email address password and content, passwords for social networking apps, Dropbox passwords and files, the user's phone contact list, and his photo gallery.

Additionally, the gadget can also acquire the phone's previous geographical locations and plot them on a map, IMEI details, MSISDN data, MAC address, device model, OS info, and personal information on the target, such as gender, age, address, education, and more.

InterApp works on a variety of platforms, operates very fast, handles hundreds of devices at the same time, and requires no technical skills to operate, coming equipped with an idiot-proof administration panel.

InterApp leaves no tracks behind

Even better, InterApp's hacking operations leave no forensics traces on a target's smartphone, or so Rayzone claims.

The company claims that its device was intentionally created for law enforcement, recommending its usage in tactical police centers, airports, or with intervention teams, being quite small and portable.

Rayzone's other products include TA9 - a big data analysis platform; Piranha - a 2G, 3G, and 4G IMSI catcher; ArrowCell - a device for detecting, locating, and neutralizing other IMSI catchers; and GeoMatrix - an advanced geo-location intelligence system. Basically, the company is the hardware-side counterpart of the infamous Hacking Team, an offensive-security vendor from Italy.