Meta's WhatsApp says Israeli spyware company Paragon targeted users
Nearly 100 journalists and other members of civil society
using WhatsApp, the popular messaging app owned by Meta, were targeted by
spyware owned by Paragon Solutions, an Israeli maker of hacking software, the
company alleged on Friday.
The journalists and other civil society members were being
alerted of a possible breach of their devices, with WhatsApp telling the
Guardian it had “high confidence” that the 90 users in question had been
targeted and “possibly compromised”.
It is not clear who was behind the attack. Like other
spyware makers, Paragon’s hacking software is used by government clients and
WhatsApp said it had not been able to identify the clients who ordered the alleged
attacks.
Experts said the targeting was a “zero-click” attack, which
means targets would not have had to click on any malicious links to be
infected.
WhatsApp declined to disclose where the journalists and
members of civil society were based, including whether they were based in the
US.
Paragon has a US office in Chantilly, Virginia. The company
has faced recent scrutiny after Wired magazine in October reported that it had
entered into a $2m contract with the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s homeland
security investigations division.
The division reportedly issued a stop-work order for the
contract to verify whether it complied with a Biden administration executive
order that restricted the use of spyware by the federal government. The Trump
administration has revoked dozens of the Biden administration’s executive
orders in its first two weeks in office, but the 2023 order, which prohibited
the use of spyware that posed a risk to national security remains in effect.
WhatsApp said it had sent Paragon a “cease and desist”
letter and that it was exploring its legal options. WhatsApp said the alleged
attacks had been disrupted in December and that it was not clear how long the
targets may have been under threat.
The company is currently notifying victims of the alleged
hacking, who will be contacted by WhatsApp.
“WhatsApp has disrupted a spyware campaign by Paragon that
targeted a number of users including journalists and members of civil society.
We’ve reached out directly to people who we believe were affected. This is the
latest example of why spyware companies must be held accountable for their
unlawful actions. WhatsApp will continue to protect people’s ability to
communicate privately,” a company spokesperson said.
The Guardian reached out to Paragon Solutions for a comment
but the company did not immediately respond.
Paragon’s spyware is known as Graphite and has capabilities
that are comparable to NSO Group’s Pegasus spyware. Once a phone is infected
with Graphite, the operator of the spyware has total access to the phone,
including being able to read messages that are sent via encrypted applications
like WhatsApp and Signal.
The company, which was founded by the former Israeli prime
minister Ehud Barak, has been the subject of media reports in Israel recently,
after it was reported that the group was sold to a US private equity firm, AE
Industrial Partners, for $900m.
Reports suggested the deal had not yet received full
regulatory approval in Israel. Cyberweapons like Graphite and Pegasus are regulated
by the Israeli ministry of defence. The Guardian reached out to AE Industrial
Partners, which is based in Boca Raton, Florida. Paragon is not listed among
the company’s investments on its website.
“For some time Paragon has had the reputation of a ‘better’
spyware company not implicated in obvious abuses, but WhatsApp’s recent
revelations suggest otherwise. This is not just a question of some bad apples –
these types of abuses are a feature of the commercial spyware industry,” said
Natalia Krapiva, senior tech legal counsel at Access Now.
WhatsApp said it believed the so-called vector, or means by
which the infection was delivered to users, was through a malicious pdf file
that was sent to individuals who were added to group chats. WhatsApp said it could
say with “confidence” that Paragon was linked to this targeting.
John Scott-Railton, a senior researcher at the Citizen Lab
at the University of Toronto, which tracks and identifies digital threats
against civil society, said Citizen Lab provided WhatsApp with some information
that helped the company understand the vector that was used against the
company’s users.
The group is expected to publish a report in the future that
will provide more details about the alleged targeting.
WhatsApp announced the news just weeks after a judge in
California ruled in the company’s favor in a landmark case against NSO Group,
the high-profile spyware maker that in 2021 was placed by the Biden
administration on a commerce department blacklist. At the time, the Biden
administration said it had placed NSO on the so-called entity list because the
company had engaged in activities “that are contrary to the national security
or foreign policy interests of the United States”.
NSO has lobbied members of Congress to be taken off the
list.
WhatsApp filed a lawsuit against NSO in 2019 after it said 1,400
users had been infected by the company’s spyware. In December, a judge, Phyllis
Hamilton, ruled that NSO was liable for the attacks, and that NSO had violated
state and federal US hacking laws and WhatsApp’s own terms of service.
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