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An Israeli firm, NSO Group, that has been accused of supplying spyware for spying on human rights activists and journalists, has now been accused of using a WhatsApp bug to access communications into iPhones and Android phones, The New York Times reported.
According to the NYT report, the spyware has characteristics similar to the technology from NSO Group.
“WhatsApp encourages people to upgrade to the latest version of our app, as well as keep their mobile operating system up to date, to protect against potential targeted exploits designed to compromise information stored on mobile devices,” it was quoted by NYT as saying.
Using the WhatsApp bug, digital attackers could steal data from a smartphone by simply placing a WhatsApp call, even if the victim did not pick up the call. WhatsApp's engineers, according to the NYT report, concluded that it was similar to other tools from the NSO Group because of its digital footprint.
According to the NYT report, the spyware was found when it was used to break into the phone of a London lawyer, who has accused the NSO group of providing tools to hack phones of journalists and activists.
The lawyer said that he got suspicious after receiving WhatsApp video calls from Norwegian numbers at odd hours. He then contacted Citizen Lab at the Munk School of Global Affairs at the University of Toronto, which has helped uncover the use of NSO Group products.
While Citizen Lab was working on the Spyware, engineers at WhatsApp had found an abnormal voice calling activity on their systems, NYT quoted an employee as saying.
WhatsApp had alerted the Justice Depatment as well, after this was reported by The Financial Times on Monday, 12 May itself.
NSO, having advertised its products as being sold only to government agencies solely for the purpose of fighting terror and aiding law enforcement investigations, put out a statement on Monday, saying that it would investigate any “credible allegations of misuse.” It also said that it won't get involved in identifying a target for its technology.
Now, even though the company claims to have an in-house ethics committee that keeps a check on buyer countries based on their human-rights records, it has time and again sold to countries with questionable human-rights records like the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia and Mexico, the NYT report said.
It would be advisable to download the latest WhatsApp version as well as update your phone’s operating system with the latest security patches available to avoid this vulnerability.
(With inputs from The New York Times.)
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