An Apple iPhone 4S is seen on December 13, 2012 in Fairfax, California. Wickr co-founder Nico Sell is working toward "geek utopia," a world where people hold the power when it comes to who sees what they share on the Internet or from their phones.

Wickr co-founder Nico Sell is working toward "geek utopia," a world where people hold the power when it comes to who sees what they share on the Internet or from their phones.

The startup's services—giving users of Apple uncrackable communications that can self-destruct—were beefed up this week, just in time for reports of cyber spies trying to snoop on Western journalists covering China.

The free software, available at Apple's online App Store, was enhanced to let people send encrypted file attachments programmed to erase themselves. The original service, released in June, only worked on the data within text, picture, video and .

"It shows the bigger vision of where we are going," Sell said Friday.

"We plan on overlaying this protocol on every that exists in the online world," continued Sell, a key behind-the-scenes figure at the famous Def Con gathering that takes place annually in Las Vegas.

"It's geek utopia, and we think we can get to it."

Wickr has a on technology which Sell said could give people ways to safeguard anything they send or put online, even digital bytes in Internet telephone calls or posts to leading social network .

"We expect to have it all covered by the end of the year," Sell said. "The idea is you would use Wickr to interact with all the other networks."

Wickr will evolve to be able to hide pictures posted at Facebook behind "decoy images," with permission needed to look behind the masks, according to company co-founder Robert Statica.

"There will be a decoy image that the public sees, and you clear your friends or your group to see the real image," explained Statica, a professor of information technology at the New Jersey Institute of Technology.

"We will let people make regular Facebook posts if they don't care about privacy."

Unlike many other apps, Wickr is designed not to store any information mined from people's contact lists.

"Right now Facebook has all my contact information even though I boycott Facebook, because a bunch of my friends uploaded it with their contact lists," Sell said. "This needs to change as an industry."

The Wickr app has been downloaded hundreds of thousands of times in more than 110 countries since the software crafted for iPhones, iPads, and iPod touch devices hit the App Store, according to the co-founders.

"Private communication is a universal human right," Sell said. "Freedom: there's an app for that."

The San Francisco-based startup behind the software is working on versions of Wickr for smartphones or tablets powered by Google-backed Android software.

Wickr's business plan is to have hundreds of millions of people globally use the free versions of the application while a small percentage opt to pay for premium features such as being able to control larger data files.

"We are trying to flip messaging on its head and give control to the sender instead of the receiver or the servers in between," Sell said.

"We can't expect these cloud services to protect our privacy; we need to do it ourselves."

More information about the application was available online at mywickr.com.