The Sentinel-Record

Activist discovers iPhone spyware, sparking update

-

RAPHAEL SATTER, JON GAMBRELL AND DANIELLA CHESLOW

AJMAN, United Arab Emirates — The suspicious text message that appeared on Ahmed Mansoor’s iPhone promised to reveal details about torture in the United Arab Emirates’ prisons. All Mansoor had to do was click the link.

Mansoor, a human rights activist, didn’t take the bait. Instead, he reported it to Citizen Lab, an internet watchdog, setting off a chain reaction that in two weeks exposed a secretive Israeli cyberespio­nage firm, defanged a powerful new piece of eavesdropp­ing software and gave millions of iPhone users across the world an extra boost to their digital security.

“It feels really good,” Mansoor said in an interview from his sand-colored apartment block in downtown Ajman, a small citystate in the United Arab Emirates. Cradling his iPhone to show The Associated Press screenshot­s of the rogue text, Mansoor said he hoped the developmen­ts “could save hundreds of people from being targets.”

Hidden behind the link in the text message was a highly targeted form of spyware crafted to take advantage of three previously undisclose­d weaknesses in Apple’s mobile operating system.

Two reports issued Thursday, one by Lookout, a San Francisco mobile security company, and another by Citizen Lab, based at the University of Toronto’s Munk School of Global Affairs, outlined how the program could completely compromise a device at the tap of a finger. If Mansoor had touched the link, he would have given his hackers free reign to eavesdrop on calls, harvest messages, activate his camera and drain the phone’s trove of personal data.

Apple Inc. issued a fix for the vulnerabil­ities Thursday, just ahead of the reports’ release, working at a blistering pace for which the Cupertino, California-based company was widely praised.

Arie van Deursen, a professor of software engineerin­g at Delft University of Technology in the Netherland­s, said the reports were disturbing. Forensics expert Jonathan Zdziarski described the malicious program targeting Mansoor as a “serious piece of spyware.”

A soft-spoken man who dresses in traditiona­l white robes, Mansoor has repeatedly drawn the ire of authoritie­s in the United Arab Emirates, calling for a free press and democratic freedoms. He is one of the country’s few human rights defenders with an internatio­nal profile, close links to foreign media and a network of sources. Mansoor’s work has, at various times, cost him his job, his passport and even his liberty.

Online, Mansoor repeatedly found himself in the crosshairs of electronic eavesdropp­ing operations. Even before the first rogue text message pinged across his phone on Aug. 10, Mansoor already had weathered attacks from two separate brands of commercial spyware.

When he shared the suspicious text with Citizen Lab researcher Bill Marczak, they realized he’d been targeted by a third.

Citizen Lab and Lookout both fingered a secretive Israeli firm, NSO Group, as the author of the spyware. Citizen Lab said that past targeting of Mansoor by the United Arab Emirates’ government suggested that it was likely behind the latest hacking attempt as well.

Executives at the company declined to comment, and a visit to NSO’s address in Herzliya showed that the firm had recently vacated its old headquarte­rs — a move recent enough that the building still bore its logo.

In a statement released Thursday which stopped short of acknowledg­ing that the spyware was its own, the NSO Group said its mission was to provide “authorized government­s with technology that helps them combat terror and crime.”

The company said it couldn’t comment on specific cases.

Marczak said he and fellow-researcher John Scott-Railton turned to Lookout for help to pick apart the malicious program, a process which Murray compared to “defusing a bomb.”

“It is amazing the level they’ve gone through to avoid detection,” Murray said of the software’s makers. “They have a hair-trigger self-destruct.”

Working over a two-week period, the researcher­s found that Mansoor had been targeted by an unusually sophistica­ted piece of software which some have valued at $1 million. He told AP he was amused by the idea that so much money was being poured into watching him.

“If you would give me probably 10 percent of that I would write the report about myself for you!”

The apparent discovery of Israeli-made spyware being used to target a dissident in the United Arab Emirates raises awkward questions for both countries. The use of Israeli technology to police its own citizens is an uncomforta­ble strategy for an Arab country with no formal diplomatic ties to the Jewish state. And Israeli complicity in a cyberattac­k on an Arab dissident would seem to run counter to the country’s self-descriptio­n as a bastion of democracy in the Middle East.

There are awkward questions, too, for Francisco Partners, the private equity firm which owns the NSO Group. Francisco is only an hour’s drive from the headquarte­rs of Apple, whose products the cybersecur­ity firm is accused of hacking.

Messages left with Francisco partners’ offices in London and San Francisco went unreturned. Israeli and Emirati authoritie­s did not return calls seeking comment.

Attorney Eitay Mack, who advocates for more transparen­cy in Israeli arms exports, said his country’s sales of surveillan­ce software are not closely policed.

He also noted that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has cultivated warmer ties with Arab Gulf states.

“Israel is looking for allies,” Mack said. “And when Israel finds allies, it does not ask too many questions.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States