Pegasus spyware: Bhima-Koregaon activists' lawyer got warning from WhatsApp
Over
the last two years, Nagpur-based human rights lawyer Nihalsing Rathod
has received receiving calls on WhatsApp
from unknown numbers. These calls would be made from international
numbers, and would invariably turn out to be a group call.
The
moment Rathod answered them, the call would disconnect. He assumed
these were innocuous calls made to his number but as a safety
measure, reported each of the “suspicious calls” to WhatsApp.On October 7, 2019, Rathod, however, was contacted by a senior researcher from the Toronto University’s CitizenLab informing him that he faced a “specific digital risk”.
“John Scott-Railton, the senior researcher told me that his lab had followed my work and during their research had found out that my profile was under a surveillance attack. All those calls made to me for two years suddenly began to make sense,” Rathod told The Wire.
CitizenLab was one of the first few organisations to examine how the Israeli surveillance firm NSO Group’s Pegasus spyware operated. In September 2018, it published comprehensive research identifying 45 countries, including India, in which operators of the spyware may be conducting operations.
The NSO Group has been in the spotlight this week after WhatsApp filed a lawsuit against them, alleging that they exploited a vulnerability in its video-calling feature to specifically target and snoop on over 1,400 users including activists and journalists. Read More
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