TMCnet News

Latest "eyeGoes" App Turns Smartphones Into One-Touch Mobile Personal Security Service
[June 22, 2014]

Latest "eyeGoes" App Turns Smartphones Into One-Touch Mobile Personal Security Service


(GlobeNewswire Via Acquire Media NewsEdge) PALM COAST, Fla., June 22, 2014 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Eye Got You Covered, Inc. (EGYC) has just updated its eagerly anticipated new high-tech security camera and emergency notification app. The 'eyeGoes' app (www.eyeGoes.com) records video and sends alerts to an emergency contact whenever a smartphone owner encounters a dangerous situation.



eyeGoes features a one-touch recording button that enables users to immediately capture footage during an emergency. As soon as the recording function is activated, eyeGoes streams audio and video coverage directly to the smartphone user's designated emergency contact. The app also uses GPS technology to provide the user's location.

Marc Dwyer, founder and CEO of EGYC, developed the concept after his daughter Jasmine left home to go to college. He would stay on the phone with Jasmine the entire time as she walked home late at night from the library back to her dorm to make sure she arrived safely. Instead of doing this, Dwyer envisioned an app that his daughter could activate if she ever found herself in an unsafe environment.


Dwyer was also touched by the death of Trayvon Martin, who was killed in Dwyer's adopted home state of Florida. "When I thought about Trayvon, I thought, 'It could be my own son,'" Dwyer said. "Then it came to me: What if I could use the technology they already have so that I could know when they were in trouble?" Dwyer grew up in Brooklyn, N.Y. His neighborhood, Brownsville, was one of the city's most unsafe areas. He eventually earned a law degree from the City University of New York. Dwyer's legal background coupled with his concern for his children's safety motivated him to design eyeGoes.

For example, when Dwyer practiced as an attorney, he noted that evidence against his clients often consisted solely of the word of another person. Based on that experience, he envisioned multiple applications for eyeGoes. For instance, many students in primary and secondary schools experience bullying, but they don't always have evidence to use against their abusers. With eyeGoes, students could record interactions with bullies and then provide those recordings to parents, school administrators and law enforcement.

Minorities in the United States are often subject to laws that encourage racial profiling, such as New York City's controversial "Stop and Frisk" policy. Using eyeGoes, smartphone owners could record profiling incidents along with any incidents in which police used excessive force.

By alerting emergency contacts immediately, eyeGoes can bring first responders to the scene, which has the potential to prevent injury or even loss of life. With eyeGoes, all video and audio recordings are preserved, even when the user's smartphone is stolen or destroyed. No matter what, a legal record of what happened remains on file.

eyeGoes is available in both the App Store and on Google Play.

Contact Info: Andrew Chen - Media Relations  [email protected] - Email   800-407-1586 Source: eyeGoes 2014 GlobeNewswire, Inc.

[ Back To TMCnet.com's Homepage ]