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Pegasus spyware owner NSO sues Israeli newspaper

The Israeli tech company NSO Group on Sunday filed a libel action against a local newspaper that reported its spyware had been used police against dozens of prominent Israelis.
The articles, published the business newspaper Calcal, claimed that law enforcement had unfettered use of the phone hacking software known as Pegasus.
What did the newspaper allege?
The reports said police spied on politicians, protesters and even members of former Prime Miner Benjamin Netanyahu’s inner circle, including one of his sons.

Calcal said officers used Pegasus without obtaining a court warrant.
The revelations caused public outrage and some politicians said the police action had threatened the country’s democracy. However, an investigation later found no indication of abuse.
The probe led Israel’s deputy attorney general found no evidence to support the claims, although the journal, Tomer Ganon, has stood his work.
Why is NSO suing the paper?
NSO said it wanted corrections made and a payment of one million shekels ($309,367 or €274,440) after its letter demanding a formal correction went unanswered.
The spyware firm said if it wins, the money will be donated to charity.
The lawsuit focuses on one article published earlier this month, which said the company allowed clients to delete traces of their use of the spyware, which NSO denies.

According to the NSO representatives, the entire series of articles was “one-sided, biased and false.”
“The thorough investigation that was carried out pulls the rug out from under another attempt to discredit the company and its workers and serves as additional proof that not every journalic investigation with a sensational headline about NSO is indeed based on facts,” the company said in a statement.
The lawsuit also accuses Calcal of “dorting” the government’s probe to make it appear as though it confirmed the reporting.
The newspaper’s editorial board said they would “respond in court” to the accusations, according to a spokesperson.
What is Pegasus?
The spyware tool enables users to remotely activate a phone’s microphone and camera and access its data.
The operator can also sweep up a phone’s contents, including messages, contacts and location hory.
Pegasus has been used to snoop on human rights activs, journals and politicians in countries ranging from Saudi Arabia to Poland to Mexico to the United Arab Emirates.
In November, the US Commerce Department blackled the company, saying its tools had been used to “conduct transnational repression.”
The EU’s data protection watchdog earlier this month called for the spyware to be banned.
NSO says it sells the product only to government entities to fight crime and terrorism.
The company does not identify its clients and says it has no knowledge of who is targeted.
Although it says it has safeguards in place to prevent abuse, it says it ultimately does not control how its clients use the software.

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