U.S. Allows WhatsApp to Pursue Lawsuit Against Zionist Spyware Maker
WASHINGTON (Middle East Eye) – The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday let Meta Platforms Inc’s WhatsApp pursue a lawsuit against the Zionist regime’s NSO Group for exploiting a bug in the messaging app that installed spy software, allowing the surveillance of 1,400 people, including journalists, human rights activists, and dissidents.
NSO had appealed a lower court’s decision allowing the lawsuit, arguing that it was immune because it was acting as an agent for unidentified foreign governments when it installed the Pegasus spyware.
In court papers, the spyware maker claimed that WhatsApp’s notification to users about being hacked scuttled a foreign government’s investigation into a Daesh militant who was using the app to plan an attack.
NSO, however, has been embroiled in scandal and lawsuits for years. The company sparked outrage after a series of investigations in 2021, under the coordination of Forbidden Stories, showed how Pegasus, the spyware maker’s flagship product, was used by governments to spy on activists, journalists and political dissidents.
Governments including Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Bahrain, and the United Arab Emirates have been accused of using the spyware.
WhatsApp - owned by Meta (formerly Facebook) - filed its lawsuit against NSO Group in 2019, accusing the company of allegedly targeting its servers in California with malware to gain unauthorized access to approximately 1,400 mobile devices in violation of U.S. state and federal law.
Last year, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a lower court’s decision to allow WhatsApp’s lawsuit to continue, saying the NSO Group did not qualify for sovereign immunity, even if its clients were foreign government agencies.
WhatsApp’s lawyers had argued that private entities like NSO are “categorically ineligible” for foreign sovereign immunity.
The case focused on a federal law called the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (FSIA), which includes some exceptions to foreign state immunity. The 9th circuit court ruled that NSO’s licensing of Pegasus and technical support to foreign governments did not shield it from liability under FSIA, which took precedence over common law.
Banned Spyware Sold to Bangladesh
Meanwhile, NSO sold advanced spyware equipment to Bangladesh last year, despite a ban on defence and surveillance exports to Dhaka, a Haaretz investigation revealed on Tuesday.
Passitora, a Cyprus-based company controlled by Zionist businessman and former intelligence commander Tal Dilian, sold the equipment to a branch of the Bangladeshi Interior Ministry last year.
The equipment, said to be able to intercept calls, texts and internet traffic, was sold to the National Telecommunication Monitoring Centre (NTMC), which is responsible for the surveillance of internet and social media.
Bangladesh does not recognize the Zionist regime and the two sides have no diplomatic relations.