Spyware for sale: The booming trade in surveillance tech
Israel’s NSO Group is in
the eye of a storm over its Pegasus software, but is far from the only company
helping governments with covert operations
By KATY
LEE 23 July 2021
https://www.timesofisrael.com/spyware-for-sale-the-booming-trade-in-surveillance-tech/
PARIS
— Israel’s NSO Group is in the eye of a storm over its Pegasus spyware —
but it is far from the only company helping governments with their covert
surveillance operations.
Explosive claims that Pegasus was used to spy on activists and even
heads of state have shone a spotlight on the software, which allows highly
intrusive access to a person’s mobile phone.
But NSO is merely one player in an industry that has quietly boomed in
recent years, arming even cash-strapped governments with powerful surveillance
technology.
“These tools have gotten cheaper and cheaper,” said Allie Funk, senior
research analyst in technology and democracy at the US think tank Freedom
House.
“So it’s not just the world’s foremost intelligence agencies that can
purchase them — it’s smaller governments or local police agencies.”
Emerging
economies such as India, Mexico, and Azerbaijan dominate the list of countries
where large numbers of phone numbers were allegedly identified as possible
targets by NSO’s clients.
Ron Deibert, director of the University of Toronto’s Citizen Lab
research center said such companies allowed governments to effectively
“purchase their own NSA” — a nod to the US National Security Agency, whose own
extensive surveillance was exposed by Edward Snowden.
Citizen Lab scours the internet for traces of digital espionage by
governments.
Just last week it published an investigation into another secretive
Israeli company that sells spyware to foreign governments, Candiru. It appears
to have been similarly used to target dissidents and journalists, from Turkey
to Singapore.
And in 2017, Citizen Lab found that Ethiopia had used spyware developed
by Cyberbit — yet another Israeli firm — to infect the computers of exiled
dissidents.
‘Entrepreneurial’ ex-spies
“There are multiple factors why we see a lot of Israeli companies,”
Deibert said.
One is the “openly entrepreneurial” attitude of Israel’s cyber-espionage
agency Unit 8200, who “encourage their graduates to go out and develop
start-ups after their military service,” he told AFP.
He added there was “a strong suspicion” that Israel gains “strategic
intelligence” from this technology being provided to other governments,
siphoning off some of the information gathered.
But while Israel is now facing calls for an export ban on such
technology, it is not the only country hosting companies that sell
off-the-shelf spyware.
Like Pegasus, Germany’s FinFisher is marketed as a tool to help
intelligence and law enforcement agencies to fight crime.
But it, too, has faced accusations that it has been used for abusive
surveillance, including to spy on Bahraini journalists and activists.
Italian firm Hacking Team was at the center of its own Pegasus-style
scandal in 2015 when a leak revealed it was selling spyware to dozens of
governments worldwide. It has since been rebranded as Memento Labs.
Not all companies in this shadowy industry specialize in the same kind
of technology.
Some sell tools that mimic cell phone towers, helping authorities to
intercept phone calls; others, such as Cellebrite, have helped police forces
from the US to Botswana to crack into locked mobile phones.
Grey zone
Deibert drew a distinction between companies operating in this “lawful
interception” industry and “hack for hire” outfits — borderline criminal groups
“that do hacking on behalf of states.”
Analysts suspect, however, that spyware companies lean frequently on
hackers’ expertise.
Recent versions of Pegasus have used weak spots in software commonly
installed on smartphones — such as WhatsApp and Apple’s iMessage — in order to
install the spyware on people’s devices.
While it remains unclear how NSO’s developers discovered these weak
spots, hackers commonly sell access to these so-called “zero-day
vulnerabilities” on the dark web.
“NSO has done a lot of research and development, but it also relies on
the grey market for vulnerabilities” said French cybersecurity expert Loic
Guezo.
He said
companies like Zerodium in the US buy access to these software vulnerabilities
from hackers and sell them either directly to states or to companies like NSO.
As the Pegasus scandal rumbles on, calls are growing for the industry to
face greater regulation — or even a moratorium on this kind of surveillance
technology altogether.
But for Deibert, “the reality is that almost all governments have a
stake in keeping this industry the way it is — secretive, unregulated — because
they benefit from it.
“So it will take a lot to bring about the sort of moratorium that my
colleagues are calling for,” he said.
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