Facebook once tried to buy the Israel spyware group NSO Group its suing due to its alleged involvement in a massive WhatsApp hack last year, documênts from an ongoing court case show.
NSO Group, which develops surveillance tools for government agencies, was accused of developing the Pegasus spyware tool that was at the heart of a significant attack against WhatsApp between April and May 2019.
The incident saw the communications and locâtion data of 1,400 users, including high-profile targets like government and military officials, intercepted and tracked through the exploitation of a flaw in the platform.
documênts from the lawsuit, however, reveal the social network approached NSO Group in 2017 in order to use the very same technology to more effectively monitor iOS users.
Facebook had also hoped to embed this tool into the Onavo Protect app, developed by the Israeli security firm Onavo which it purchased in 2013.
Facebook voluntarily delisted the app following discussions between the two companies and was also removed from the Google Play Store.
Then, in early 2019, Apple took the drastic measure of stripping Facebook of its development license altogether after the firm was found to be marketing its newly-developed Research app, which bore staggering similarities with Onavo Protect, to children.
The attempted acquisition of NSO Group - and effort to seize Pegasus - arose because Facebook was concerned that its method for gathering user data through Onavo Protect was less effective on iOS devices than Android devices.
The connection between NSO Group and Onavo, as well as Facebooks ambitions to use the Pegasus technology to render iOS tracking far more potent, was hidden until it was revealed in the court documênts.
When the acquisition attempt failed, Facebook even approached NSO Group to solicit its services through Pegasus technology to further monitor Onavo Protect users, for a per-user fee to be paid monthly.
This approach was also rejected, as NSO Group only solicits its technology to government agencies, security services and law enforcement agencies.
Employees from NSO Group, incidentally sued Facebook last November for allegedly blocking their private WhatsApp accounts, as well as the Facebook and Instagram accounts of their friends and family members.
NSO Group, which develops surveillance tools for government agencies, was accused of developing the Pegasus spyware tool that was at the heart of a significant attack against WhatsApp between April and May 2019.
The incident saw the communications and locâtion data of 1,400 users, including high-profile targets like government and military officials, intercepted and tracked through the exploitation of a flaw in the platform.
documênts from the lawsuit, however, reveal the social network approached NSO Group in 2017 in order to use the very same technology to more effectively monitor iOS users.
Facebook had also hoped to embed this tool into the Onavo Protect app, developed by the Israeli security firm Onavo which it purchased in 2013.
Facebook voluntarily delisted the app following discussions between the two companies and was also removed from the Google Play Store.
Then, in early 2019, Apple took the drastic measure of stripping Facebook of its development license altogether after the firm was found to be marketing its newly-developed Research app, which bore staggering similarities with Onavo Protect, to children.
The attempted acquisition of NSO Group - and effort to seize Pegasus - arose because Facebook was concerned that its method for gathering user data through Onavo Protect was less effective on iOS devices than Android devices.
The connection between NSO Group and Onavo, as well as Facebooks ambitions to use the Pegasus technology to render iOS tracking far more potent, was hidden until it was revealed in the court documênts.
When the acquisition attempt failed, Facebook even approached NSO Group to solicit its services through Pegasus technology to further monitor Onavo Protect users, for a per-user fee to be paid monthly.
This approach was also rejected, as NSO Group only solicits its technology to government agencies, security services and law enforcement agencies.
Employees from NSO Group, incidentally sued Facebook last November for allegedly blocking their private WhatsApp accounts, as well as the Facebook and Instagram accounts of their friends and family members.
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