— Anti-Corruption News Story Curated by Anti-Corruption Digest International Risk & Compliance News

Messaging app WhatsApp has said Indian journalists and activists are among some 1,400 people worldwide who were targeted with Israeli-made spyware.

WhatsApp filed a lawsuit against NSO Group on Wednesday, alleging it was behind cyber-attacks that infected devices in April and May.

The Israeli company, which makes software for surveillance, has strongly disputed the allegations.

India has 400 million WhatsApp users, making the country its biggest market.

Hackers were able to remotely install surveillance software on phones and other devices by using a major vulnerability in the messaging app.

“We believe this attack targeted at least 100 members of civil society, which is an unmistakable pattern of abuse,” WhatsApp said in a statement.

After discovering the cyber-attacks in May, WhatsApp quickly rolled out a fix, adding “new protections” to their systems and issuing updates.

Cyber experts at Toronto-based internet watchdog Citizen Lab helped WhatsApp identify cases where the suspected targets of this attack were members of civil society, such as human rights defenders or journalists.

Citizen Lab said it had identified more than 100 cases of “abusive targeting of human rights defenders and journalists in at least 20 countries across the globe, ranging from Africa, Asia, Europe, the Middle East, and North America”.

Source: WhatsApp: Indians among those ‘targeted’ by spyware – BBC News

 

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