The Timaru Herald

Spyware attack on Gulf journalist­s likely linked to Saudi Arabia, UAE

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Dozens of journalist­s at Al-Jazeera, the Qatari state-owned media company, have been targeted by advanced spyware in an attack likely linked to the government­s of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, a cybersecur­ity watchdog reported yesterday.

Citizen Lab said it traced malware that infected the personal phones of 36 journalist­s, producers, anchors and executives at Al-Jazeera back to the Israel-based NSO Group, which has been widely condemned for selling spyware to repressive government­s.

Most unnerving to the investigat­ors was that iMessages were infecting targeted cellphones without the users taking any action — what’s known as a zero-click vulnerabil­ity.

Through push notificati­ons alone, the malware instructed the phones to upload their content to servers linked to the NSO Group, Citizen Lab said, turning journalist­s’ iPhones into powerful surveillan­ce tools without even luring users to click on suspicious links or threatenin­g texts.

The co-ordinated attacks on Qatarifund­ed Al-Jazeera, which Citizen Lab described as the largest concentrat­ion of phone hacks targeting a single organisati­on, occurred in July, just weeks before the Trump administra­tion announced the normalizat­ion of ties between Israel and the UAE, the archival to Qatar.

The breakthrou­gh deal took public what had been a long-secret alliance. Analysts say normalisat­ion likely will lead to stronger co-operation in digital surveillan­ce between Israel and Persian

Gulf sheikhdoms.

Apple said it was aware of the Citizen Lab report and said the latest version of its mobile operating system, iOS 14, ‘‘delivered new protection­s against these kinds of attacks.’’ It sought to reassure users that NSO doesn’t target the average iPhone owner, but rather sells its software to foreign government­s to target a limited group. Apple has not been able to independen­tly verify Citizen Lab’s analysis.

Citizen Lab, which has been tracking NSO spyware for four years, tied the attacks ‘‘with medium confidence’’ to Emirati and Saudi government­s, based on their past targeting of dissidents at home and abroad with the same spyware.

The two countries are embroiled in a bitter geopolitic­al dispute with Qatar.

–AP

 ?? AP ?? Al-Jazeera staff work at their TV station in Doha, Qatar. Dozens of journalist­s at Al Jazeera, the Qatari state-owned media company, have been targeted by advanced spyware.
AP Al-Jazeera staff work at their TV station in Doha, Qatar. Dozens of journalist­s at Al Jazeera, the Qatari state-owned media company, have been targeted by advanced spyware.

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