Site icon Middle East Monitor

US puts Israeli spyware firm, NSO Group, on trade blacklist

This studio photographic illustration shows a smartphone with the website of Israel's NSO Group which features 'Pegasus' spyware, on display in Paris on July 21, 2021. - Private Israeli firm NSO Group has denied media reports its Pegasus software is linked to the mass surveillance of journalists and rights defenders, and insisted that all sales of its technology are approved by Israel's defence ministry (Photo by JOEL SAGET / AFP) (Photo by JOEL SAGET/AFP via Getty Images)

This studio photographic illustration shows a smartphone with the website of Israel's NSO Group which features 'Pegasus' spyware, on display in Paris on July 21, 2021 [JOEL SAGET/AFP via Getty Images]

The US is sanctioning an Israeli spyware company, NSO, by putting it on a trade blacklist, the Washington Post reports.

According to the report, the NSO Group was accused of supplying technology to foreign governments to maliciously target government officials, journalists, businesspeople, activists, academics and embassy workers.

Last July, NSO Group had been accused of assisting despotic regimes in targeting journalists, political dissidents and human rights activists. The Israeli firm, accused of supplying spyware to governments, has been linked to a list of 50,000 Smartphone numbers, including those of activists, journalists, business executives and politicians around the world.

The US secretary of commerce, Gina Raimondo, said: “The United States is committed to aggressively using export controls to hold companies accountable that develop traffic or use technologies to conduct malicious activities that threaten the cyber security of members of civil society, dissidents, government officials and organisations here and abroad.”

Raimondo also added a Russian company, Positive Technologies, and Singapore-based Computer Security Initiative Consultancy to its list, alleging that they “traffic in cyber tools” used to gain unauthorised access to computer systems.

READ: US companies provide high resolution images of Israel

Exit mobile version