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Israel's NSO Group is a smartphone surveillance corporation that creates hacks for iOS and Android devices. These tools allow governments to crack the security on mobile devices such as the iPhone. One of their employees disabled the McAfee Security software on their company PC, stole the source code for NSO Group's products and attempted to sell it on the dark web for $50 million in cryptocurrency. Luckily the software wasn't transferred to another party before the authorities were alerted and the rogue employee was arrested.
While this story is comical as it does answer the age old question, "Who would use McAfee Security software nowadays?" it is good that the employee was stopped. It seems that the Israeli government and other governments use NSO Group tools to defeat the security on mobile devices. It would be really bad for those tools to fall into the wrong hands.
NSO has developed cyberweapons used by dozens of intelligence apparatuses, militaries, and law enforcement around the world. Its most important product is a spyware known as Pegasus. The software can infect cellphones, allowing someone to record calls, remotely access the device's camera, see text messages, obtain GPS coordinates, and more. The software can be remotely installed onto any mobile device without the owner's knowledge.
According to the indictment, upon realizing that he was going to lose his job, the employee copied top-secret code from the company's networks – code that could damage security in several countries, including Israel, if it reached the wrong hands. Following his dismissal, he contacted a foreign entity and attempted to sell a hard drive containing the code for $50 million.
While this story is comical as it does answer the age old question, "Who would use McAfee Security software nowadays?" it is good that the employee was stopped. It seems that the Israeli government and other governments use NSO Group tools to defeat the security on mobile devices. It would be really bad for those tools to fall into the wrong hands.
NSO has developed cyberweapons used by dozens of intelligence apparatuses, militaries, and law enforcement around the world. Its most important product is a spyware known as Pegasus. The software can infect cellphones, allowing someone to record calls, remotely access the device's camera, see text messages, obtain GPS coordinates, and more. The software can be remotely installed onto any mobile device without the owner's knowledge.
According to the indictment, upon realizing that he was going to lose his job, the employee copied top-secret code from the company's networks – code that could damage security in several countries, including Israel, if it reached the wrong hands. Following his dismissal, he contacted a foreign entity and attempted to sell a hard drive containing the code for $50 million.