The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Q&A ON THE ALLEGED BEZOS PHONE HACK

- By Frank Bajak AP Technology Writer

BOSTON >> U.N. human rights experts are asking Washington to investigat­e a suspected Saudi hack that may have siphoned data from the personal smartphone of Jeff Bezos, Amazon founder and owner of The Washington Post. But the forensic evidence they cite comes from an incomplete study of Bezos’s phone, raising multiple questions. Here’s a quick guide to what’s known, and what remains unknown, about their findings. Q what happened to bezos’ phone?

A

According to a report overseen by a former longtime FBI agent and top cybersecur­ity official in the Obama administra­tion, evidence on the phone suggests it was infected by spyware in May 2018 via a WhatsApp message from the account of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. That message included a video file that the firm’s investigat­ors say likely contained malware.

Bezos’ personal security adviser had been advised in February 2019 to have the phone examined by an intelligen­ce official who has not been named. Bezos went public with the suspected hack shortly thereafter, saying the National Enquirer tabloid had threatened to publish his private messages and photos.

Q

are the forensic findings conclusive?

A

Not at all. Outside security researcher­s highlighte­d several issues with the forensics report, which was overseen by Anthony Ferrante, who is senior managing director of FTI Consulting’s cybersecur­ity operations and had worked on the National Security Council under President Barack Obama.

For instance, the FTI report, dated November and obtained Wednesday by the Vice News site Motherboar­d, said researcher­s didn’t find any malware on the phone, nor any evidence that Bezos’ phone had surreptiti­ously communicat­ed with known spyware command servers.

Further, an examinatio­n of the crucial root file system — where top-flight hackers often hide their malware — was still pending when the report was written. IPhone security expert Will Strafach, CEO of Guardian Firewall,

said that if the FTI investigat­ors didn’t look at the root file system, they didn’t do a thorough forensic exam.

“I think the U.N. intentions are good but the details really matter here and the public reporting falls short of any real firm smoking gun,” said Strafach.

Other security experts questioned the FTI team’s forensic chops, wondering on Twitter and in blog posts why it was unable to decrypt the software that would have delivered the malware payload along with the video file.

Alex Stamos of Stanford University tweeted: “The funny thing is that it looks like FTI potentiall­y has the murder weapon sitting right there, they just haven’t figured out how to test it.”

FTI’s Ferrante did not response to emails and text messages seeking comment. The company said in a statement that all FTI’s work for clients is confidenti­al and that FTI does not “comment

on, confirm or deny client engagement­s.” Facebook said the outfit did not reach out to WhatsApp to request assistance with its probe.

Q

could hackers have erased all evidence of intrusion?

A

Absolutely, said Strafach. Elite hackers plant malware that erases itself after surreptiti­ously sending sensitive data to command servers.

“It scoops up everything they want and removes itself so there’s no trace, no evidence,” he said. “Anyone who knows what they are doing are going to cover up their tracks.”

Sophistica­ted mobile spyware — such as a package called Pegasus, made by the Israeli hacker-for-hire company NSO Group — is designed to bypass detection and mask its activity. Saudi Arabia is reported to have used Pegasus against dissidents and human rights activists within weeks of the suspected Bezos hack.

On Wednesday, NSO Group “unequivoca­lly” denied that its technology was

used in the Bezos hack.

Q

why is the united nations involved?

A

One of the two U.N. officials seeking answers in the case, Agnes Callamard. focuses on extrajudic­ial killings and has already investigat­ed the Saudi government’s role in the October 2018 murder in Turkey of Saudi critic and Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi.

The other, David Kaye, is the U.N. point person on free expression. He focuses on the growing and lawless use of malicious spyware to monitor and intimidate human-rights defenders and journalist­s.

Kaye said via text message that he received the FTI report in November.

Both are independen­t experts in the U.N.’s human rights arm, not employees of the internatio­nal organizati­on.

Q

are other public figures at risk?

A

It’s difficult to say at the moment. Prince

Mohammed has attended gatherings with numerous U.S. entertaine­rs, technology executives and sports-team owners. A senior administra­tion official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss internal matters, said Jared Kushner, a White House aide and son-inlaw to President Donald Trump, has communicat­ed with the crown prince via WhatsApp.

Q

why isn’t the u.S. Government more involved?

A

A top U.S. Justice Department official, Adam S. Hickey, would not say whether federal investigat­ors were looking into the allegation­s. Trump has been reluctant to condemn the Saudi prince over the Khashoggi killing and often expresses satisfacti­on with his government’s purchases of U.S. weapons.

This story has been corrected to refer to Anthony Ferrante as senior managing director of FTI’s cybersecur­ity operations, rather than its head.

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Jeff Bezos

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