Page 6 - Miranda Patrucic News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana
To support democracy, fight corruption
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Juan Francisco Sandoval participará en foro anticorrupción de USAID
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What happened?
According to the results of the investigation, the Azerbaijani authorities used a spy program produced by the Israeli company NSO Group, known for developing devices for cyber-harassment, to wiretap independent journalists and activists.
In May 2021, three chief editors working with OCCRP traveled to the capital of Turkey – Ankara, the capital of Turkey and the Azerbaijani journalist Khadija Ismayilova, who received the right to leave the country, went there with them.
Khadija Ismailova (left) and OCCRP journalist Miranda Patrucic. Photo: OCCRP
OCCRP editors told Khadija that the main purpose of their meeting is to convey important information to her. As it turned out, Ismailova’s mobile phone was intercepted by the Pegasus program. Due to its unique properties, this program allows one to pursue the owner of the phone, and secretly perform various operations on it. Pegasus can record all conversations, read the texts of SMS messages, transfer photos and videos
Private Israeli spyware used to hack cellphones of journalists, activists worldwide
Dana Priest, Craig Timberg and Souad Mekhennet, The Washington Post
July 18, 2021
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FILE - In this July 3, 2020, file photo, Hatice Cengiz, the fiancee of slain Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, talks to members of the media in Istanbul. Amnesty International reported that its forensic researchers had determined that NSO Group s flagship Pegasus spyware was successfully installed on the phone of Cengiz, just four days after Khashoggi was killed.Emrah Gurel/AP
Military-grade spyware licensed by an Israeli firm to governments for tracking terrorists and criminals was used in attempted and successful hacks of 37 smartphones belonging to journalists, human rights activists, business executives and two women close to murdered Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, according to an investigation by The Washington Post and 16 media partners.
Private spy software sold by NSO group found on cellphones worldwide
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