NSO has been accused of selling its spyware to repressive governments known to crush dissent. The company even signed a deal for $55 million with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. There was even evidence that Pegasus was used to track the associates of Jamal Khashoggi, the reporter who was killed in 2018. Big names have now been added to the list of possible targets.
A little over a decade ago, a small Israeli company created what would become the world’s most powerful and notorious hacking tool.
Mark Mazzetti, who is a Washington investigative correspondent for The Times, explains the surprising story of the NSO Group and why, despite banning its technology, the United States kept trying to use it.
Guest: Mark Mazzetti, a Washington investigative correspondent for The New York Times.
Background reading:
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