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Facebook Bans Cyber Mercenary Groups Involved In Spying Of Journalists

Facebook Bans Cyber Mercenary Groups Involved In Spying Of Journalists, Dissidents In 100+ Countries

Accounts tied to Israeli and Indian entities such as Cobwebs Technologies, Cognyte, Black Cube and Bluehawk CI and BellTrox have been blocked.

KARACHI ( JAVED MAHMOOD )

Facebook’s parent entity Meta has blocked several “cyber-mercenary” groups, which were involved in spying on journalists, dissidents, and activists in more than 100 countries in the world.

The social media network today said it had begun warning about 50,000 people it believed may have come under scrutiny across more than 100 nations.

“The surveillance-for-hire industry … looks like indiscriminate targeting on behalf of the highest bidder,” Nathaniel Gleicher, the head of security policy at Meta, told a press briefing.

In a report, Meta called out seven private surveillance companies for hacking and other abuses, suspending roughly 1,500 mostly fake accounts across Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp.

The Facebook parent said it deleted accounts tied to Cobwebs Technologies, Cognyte, Black Cube and Bluehawk CI – all of which were based or founded in Israel, a leading player in the cyber-surveillance business.

India-based BellTroX, North Macedonian firm Cytrox and an unidentified entity in China also saw accounts linked to them removed from Meta platforms.

Meta cybersecurity official David Agranovich said he hoped Thursday’s announcement would “kick-start the disruption of the surveillance-for-hire market”.

While “cyber-mercenaries” claim their services only focus on criminals and “terrorists”, Meta’s months-long investigation concluded that targeting is indiscriminate and includes journalists, dissidents, critics of authoritarian governments, families of opposition and human rights activists.

Services offered by these companies ranged from scooping up public information online to using fake personas to build trust with targets or digital snooping via hack attacks.

One tactic includes tricking the person into clicking on a booby-trapped link or file that installs software that can then steal information from whatever device they use to go online.

With that kind of access, the mercenary can steal data from a target’s phone or computer, as well as silently activate microphones, cameras and tracking, according to the Meta team.

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