New Delhi: Israel-based company NSO, Pegasus Spyware developer, on Wednesday said it would investigate the abuse of credible technology abuse in the middle of revelation that software has been used to lurking on leading leaders and journalists.
This statement attended a global investigation published on Sunday by 17 media organizations, led by a non-profit journalism group based in Paris, claiming spyware used to target cellphone politicians, journalists, government officials and human rights activists.
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Foreign Minister Amit Shah said on Monday that bullies and obstruct would not be able to thwart the Indian development trajectory through their conspiracy (opposition) and Monsoonnso, which previously criticized the leak list, confirmed that the number was not related to the company.
“Every claim that the name in the list is certainly related to the Pegasus target or the potential target of Pegasus is wrong and wrong,” he said in his latest statement entitled ‘Pretty enough’.
“NSO is a technology company.
We do not operate the system, it also does not have access to our customer data, but they are obliged to give us this information with an investigation.” The Cyber company said that it would investigate the evidence of credible technology abuse of technology, adding it would turn off the necessary system.
In a very statement that reads, it adds that it will not respond to media questions about this problem or play together with “malignant and slander campaigns”.
Previously, NSO had refused reporting by media partners, said it was “full of the wrong assumptions and the theory that was not bound”.
Pegasus is intended only for use by government intelligence and law enforcement agencies to fight terrorism and crime, NSO said.
Meanwhile, Israel has established a senior senior team of senior ministers to “look at” allegations that breed that spyware sold by NSO has been misused on a global scale.
The team was led by the Israeli National Security Council, who answered Prime Minister Naftali Bennett.
Wire, which is part of the international consortium, reports that the list of “potential targets” that leaked to hacked several prominent names such as former Head of Congress Rahul Gandhi, Minister of BJP Ashwini Vaishnaw and Prahlad Singh Patel, former Selection Commissioner Ashok Lavasa and Pollish Processing Prashant Kishor , The government has fired media reports on the use of Pegasus software to lurk Indians, by saying enhanced accusations right in front of the Monsoon Parliament session intended to “rot India’s democracy”.
(With input from PTI)