Court rules NSO Group the baddie in hacking case

 
Exploited a WhatsApp flaw

A US judge has ruled that Israeli spyware maker NSO Group breached hacking laws by using WhatsApp to infect devices with its Pegasus spyware. 

A Northern California federal judge held NSO Group liable for targeting the devices of 1,400 WhatsApp users, violating state and federal hacking laws as well as WhatsApp’s terms of service, which prohibit the use of the messaging platform for malicious purposes.

The ruling comes five years after Meta-owned WhatsApp sued NSO Group, alleging the spyware outfit had exploited an audio-calling vulnerability in the messaging platform to install its Pegasus spyware on unsuspecting users’ devices.

WhatsApp said that more than 100 human rights defenders, journalists and “other members of civil society” were targeted by the malware, along with government officials and diplomats.

In her ruling, Judge Phyllis Hamilton said NSO did not dispute that it “must have reverse-engineered or decompiled the WhatsApp software” to install its Pegasus spyware on devices, but raised questions about whether it had done so before agreeing to WhatsApp’s terms of service.

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