The prime minister’s residence and office at 10 Downing Street, London Rob Pinney/Getty Images
The UK prime minister鈥檚 office was targeted multiple times by spyware sold legally to states around the world, claim security experts. The Pegasus software, created by the Israeli firm NSO Group, allows security services to listen in to the microphone on a compromised smartphone, read messages and access sensitive data.
The Citizen Lab, a research group at the University of Toronto in Canada that has worked for years to examine the use of spyware such as Pegasus, claims that it warned the UK government of attacks in 2020 and 2021.
The group says it has found evidence for multiple suspected Pegasus infections of devices used by the prime minister鈥檚 office and聽what was then the Foreign and聽Commonwealth Office (FCO), now the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO). It聽claims that the spyware was being deployed against the FCO from the United Arab Emirates, India, Cyprus and Jordan, while the attacks against 10 Downing Street originated in the UAE.
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Ron Deibert at the Citizen Lab聽said in a that the group鈥檚 main goal is to watch for聽spyware use against non-governmental organisations, such as charities and aid groups, but that it sometimes finds evidence of state-on-state espionage and聽would occasionally inform the聽targeted nation if it believed it聽could reduce harm to do so.
A by The New Yorker claims that the UK National Cyber聽Security Centre scanned numerous devices used by Downing Street staff, including a聽smartphone used by Prime Minister Boris Johnson, once it had been informed of the attacks, but was unable to locate evidence of an intrusion. The report quotes聽a Citizen Lab member who聽believes data was probably stolen, and says that the UK has been 鈥渟pectacularly burned鈥.
NSO, which was founded by former Israeli state surveillance operators, says it licenses customers to use its software 鈥渙nly for their lawful and necessary purposes of preventing and investigating terrorism and serious crime鈥. However, previous reports from the Citizen Lab revealed that Pegasus is being misused to watch journalists, academics and politicians.
Researchers have claimed that Pegasus has been used to hack the phones of journalists at as well as people at human rights organisation . In 2017, it聽emerged that Mexico had been聽using the software to target journalists and their families. It was also suspected in attacks targeting Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and , who was murdered in聽a Saudi Arabian consulate.
at internet security company ESET says that Pegasus and similar tools are often used by聽governments to carry out espionage against other states. It聽can infect users remotely, without their knowledge.
鈥淥nce the software is placed on聽a device, it can copy messages, view photos, record phone calls and even secretly view the user via聽the phone鈥檚 camera, and both Android and Apple phones are vulnerable,鈥 he says. 鈥淧egasus can聽be installed on聽phones via a simple text message or through exploiting vulnerabilities on devices that can even deploy without requiring the user to click anything. High-profile people must be aware of the ease at which this can occur and must take precautions such as using a second device for official business and hold private meetings away from any device where possible.鈥
The FCDO and the prime minister鈥檚 press office told 狈别飞听厂肠颈别苍迟颈蝉迟 that they wouldn鈥檛 comment on matters relating to security. NSO Group didn鈥檛 respond to a request for comment.
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