Business Standard

Global lobbies may have been involved in Whatsapp spyware

- NEHA ALAWADHI & KARAN CHOUDHURY

The government is exploring options to assess the extent of the impact caused by NSO Group’s spyware on Indian individual­s even as home ministry sources said there are fears that internatio­nal lobbies might have been involved in spying.

These lobbies, the ministry says, are trying to create a narrative around Indian governance as well as the economy.

“We have been investigat­ing the spying allegation­s for some time and are trying to understand the extent of the damage done. We are also looking at lobby groups active in India to figure out if they were involved in this and why, and come out with a report soon on this issue,” said a senior official looking into the investigat­ion.

Whatsapp said on October 29 it was filing a federal complaint in the US against Israeli technology firm NSO Group for a cyberattac­k that exploited a vulnerabil­ity in the chat app’s video-calling feature, which could compromise the target person’s device. According to reports, 121 Indians were also affected in the breach.

The breach was first reported in May this year but gathered steam in India after Whatsapp’s complaint and activists and journalist­s saying they received communicat­ion from Torontobas­ed Citizen Lab, which helped Whatsapp’s investigat­ion of the breach.

Sources said some other investigat­ive agencies including the National Investigat­ion Agency (NIA) might be involved at a later stage. However, no such decision has been taken yet in this regard.

While NSO has maintained it sells only to government­s, the India has so far not categorica­lly accepted or denied buying NSO software by either the Centre, states, or government agencies. Whatsapp

has said it will cooperate with the government to “do all we can to protect users from hackers attempting to weaken security ”.

Collateral damage to Whatsapp Pay? Facebook-owned Whatsapp has been keen to launch its payments service in India for over a year. Last week, during its quarterly earning call, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said the company would launch the payments feature in India soon.

Payments through Whatsapp were introduced to a test group of a million users in February last year. The service is based on the Unified Payments Interface standard, which has been developed by National Payments Corporatio­n of India. A senior official of

NP CI did not comment on whether the issue would impact Whatsapp Pay ’s prospects in India. “It is too early to jump to any conclusion. But safety of platforms that seek to provide payment services will be cause for concern,” said an official at the Ministry of Electronic­s and Informatio­n Technology. The NSO breach has sparked fears that the UPI apparatus might get jeopardise­d through Whatsapp.

Government sources said Whatsapp withheld informatio­n from the government after the May revelation­s of a spyware targeting Indian users. They cited Whatsapp’s informatio­n on the issue given to the Computer Emergency Response TeamIndia, saying it was a “communicat­ion in pure technical jargon without any mention of Pegasus or the extent of breach”. Social media users pointed out the agency should have followed up on the vulnerabil­ity reported on its own website. Pegasus is the name of the software that is sold by NSO Group.

The CERT-IN is the “national nodal agency for responding to computer security i ncidents as and when they occur,” according to the IT ministr y website. However, the agency ’s role has become more like an advisory that a preemptive response organisati­on.

“Organisati­ons that are cyberattac­ked are required to report to CERT-IN. However, it is understood that the victim organisati­ons have not received any feedback from CERT-IN on the breaches they have reported. CERT has to re-invent its role in helping organisati­ons learn how to cope with such attacks,” said Kamlesh Bajaj, founder director of CERT-IN.

“The Pegasus-whatsapp breach has made it clear that devices can be broken into and even end-to end encryption can be circumvent­ed. CERT should be aware that platforms will be exploited. They should work directly with vendors like Microsoft, Google, and Facebook whose platforms get hacked or impacted,” he said.

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