Israeli cyber intelligence developed WhatsApp spyware
WhatsApp is encouraging users to update to the
latest version of the app after discovering a vulnerability that allowed
spyware to be injected into a user’s phone through the app’s phone call
function.
The spyware was developed by the Israeli cyber
intelligence company NSO Group, according to the Financial Times, which first
reported the vulnerability.
Attackers could transmit the malicious code to a
target’s device by calling the user and infecting the call whether or not the
recipient answered the call. Logs of the incoming calls were often erased,
according to the report.
WhatsApp said that the vulnerability was discovered
this month, and that the company quickly addressed the problem within its own
infrastructure. An update to the app was published Monday, and the company is
encouraging users to upgrade out of an abundance of caution.
The company has also alerted US law enforcement to
the exploit, and published a “CVE notice”, an advisory to other cybersecurity
experts alerting them to “common vulnerabilities and exposures”.
The vulnerability was used in an attempted attack on
the phone of a UK-based attorney on 12 May, the FT reported. The lawyer, who
was not identified by name, is involved in a lawsuit against NSO brought by a
group of Mexican journalists, government critics and a Saudi Arabian dissident.
“The attack has all the hallmarks of a private
company reportedly that works with governments to deliver spyware that takes
over the functions of mobile phone operating systems,” WhatsApp said in a
statement. “We have briefed a number of human rights organizations to share the
information we can and to work with them to notify civil society.”
NSO Group did not immediately respond to the Guardian’s
request for a comment. The company told the FT that it was investigating the
WhatsApp attacks.
“Under no circumstances would NSO be involved in the
operating or identifying of targets of its technology, which is solely operated
by intelligence and law enforcement agencies,” NSO Group told the FT. “NSO
would not, or could not, use its technology in its own right to target any
person or organization, including this individual.”
NSO limits sales of its spyware, Pegasus, to state
intelligence agencies. The spyware’s capabilities are near absolute. Once
installed on a phone, the software can extract all of the data that’s already
on the device (text messages, contacts, GPS location, email, browser history,
etc) in addition to creating new data by using the phone’s microphone and
camera to record the user’s surroundings and ambient sounds, according to a
2016 report by the New York Times.
WhatsApp
has about 1.5bn users around the world. The messaging app uses end-to-end
encryption, making it popular and secure for activists and dissidents. The
Pegasus spyware does not affect or involve the app’s encryption.