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An Employee of NSO Group, Which Sells Powerful Spyware, Allegedly Stole Company's Tools For Personal Profit (vice.com)

Joseph Cox, reporting for Motherboard: NSO Group sells some of the most potent, off-the-shelf malware for remotely breaking into smartphones. Some versions allow a law enforcement or intelligence agency to steal essentially all meaningful data from an iPhone with no interaction from the target. Others just require the victim to click one link in a carefully crafted text message, before giving up their contacts, emails, social media messages, GPS location, and much more. NSO only sells its tools to government agencies, but a newly released, explosive indictment alleges that a company employee stole NSO's spyware product, dubbed Pegasus, and tried to sell it to non-authorized parties for $50 million worth of cryptocurrency.

These capabilities "are estimated at hundreds of millions of [US] dollars," a translated version of the indictment reads. Several Israeli outlets were the first to report on and upload the indictment. The news shows a danger often highlighted by critics of the malware industry: that hacking tools or exploits typically reserved for law enforcement or intelligence agencies may fall into other hands. Omri Lavie, the co-founder of NSO, told Motherboard in an online chat "no comment."

3 of 48 comments (clear)

  1. Who would expect it? by qbast · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Employees of a scummy company are also scum. News at 11.

  2. No honor among thieves by cerberusss · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Breaking news: thieving tools stolen!

    In a move that stunned nobody, a thief stole from crime lord. The crime lord in question sold thieving tools to corrupt governments to spy on their citizens. When business took off, the crime lord hired a local thug. When the crime lord looked the other way, the thief left with all of the inventory! The crime lord took to the courts and explained his plight.

    When the courts laughed in his face, he threatened to expose the moral bankrupcy of several national institutions. Soon after, an attorney general helped him rewrite his complaint, not mentioning ordinary theft but rather calling it "industrial spionage" and was thus able to spend the taxes of citizens to spy on them. The crime lord himself told Motherboard in an online chat "no comment."

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  3. Trust us with the backdoor, we're the Government by dwillden · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And thus the proof to the argument that if a backdoor or entry method exists for the authorities, it will get out to the criminals. Someone considered 'trustworthy' will have a price. or will be greedy or disgruntled.

    And all security is then nullified.

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    I'm too lazy to compose a creative sig.