Santa Cruz Sentinel

Apple suing hacker-for-hire company NSO Group

- By Alan Suderman

RICHMOND, VA. >> Tech giant Apple announced Tuesday it is suing Israel’s NSO Group, seeking to block the world’s most infamous hacker-forhire company from breaking into Apple’s products such as the iPhone.

Apple said in a complaint filed in federal court in California that NSO Group employees are “amoral 21st century mercenarie­s who have created highly sophistica­ted cyber-surveillan­ce machinery that invites routine and flagrant abuse.” Apple said NSO Group’s spyware, called Pegasus, had been used to attack a small number of Apple customers worldwide.

“State-sponsored actors like the NSO Group spend millions of dollars on sophistica­ted surveillan­ce technologi­es without effective accountabi­lity. That needs to change,” said Craig Federighi, Apple’s senior vice president of software engineerin­g.

NSO Group has broadly denied wrongdoing and said its products have been used by government­s to save lives.

“Pedophiles and terrorists can freely operate in technologi­cal safe-havens, and we provide government­s the lawful tools to fight it. NSO group will continue to advocate for the truth,” the company said in a statement.

It’s the latest blow to the hacking firm, which was recently blackliste­d by the U.S. Commerce Department and is currently being sued by social media giant Facebook.

Security researcher­s have found Pegasus being used around the world to break into the phones of human rights activists, journalist­s and even members of the Catholic clergy.

Pegasus infiltrate­s phones to vacuum up personal and location data and surreptiti­ously controls the smartphone’s microphone­s and cameras. Researcher­s have found several examples of NSO Group tools using so-called “zero click” exploits that infect targeted mobile phones without any user interactio­n.

The Biden administra­tion announced this month that NSO Group and another Israeli cybersecur­ity firm called Candiru were being added to the “entity list,” which limits their access to U.S. components and technology by requiring government permission for exports.

Also this month, security researcher­s disclosed that Pegasus spyware was detected on the cellphones of six Palestinia­n human rights activists. And Mexican prosecutor­s recently announced they have arrested a businessma­n on charges he used the Pegasus spyware to spy on a journalist.

Facebook has sued NSO Group over the use of a somewhat similar exploit that allegedly intruded via its globally popular encrypted WhatsApp messaging app. A U.S. federal appeals court issued a ruling this month rejecting an effort by NSO Group to have the lawsuit thrown out.

Apple also announced Tuesday that it was donating $10 million, as well as any damages won in the NSO Group lawsuit, to cybersurve­illance researcher­s and advocates.

 ?? SEBASTIAN SCHEINER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A logo adorns a wall on a branch of the Israeli NSO Group company near the southern Israeli town of Sapir.
SEBASTIAN SCHEINER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A logo adorns a wall on a branch of the Israeli NSO Group company near the southern Israeli town of Sapir.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States