How Legit Spyware Is Hacking Into Personal Lives Of Politicians

An Israeli spyware is said to have compromised personal phones of many important politicians and world leaders

The military grade spyware known as the Pegasus has notoriously got into the lives of politicians, diplomats, business leaders and even journalists. The menace has been such that it has left the French President Emmanuel Macron no choice but to change his phone, his number and even order for an overhaul in cyber security protocols. 


Pakistan has been busy blaming India for having let the mouse out of the box. The spyware is called The spyware, called Pegasus. It was developed by an Israeli company which is now claiming its buyers were legitimate ones and vetted before it was sold to them. 

The spyware actually 'enables users to infiltrate phones without being detected in order to record calls, control cameras, and extract messages and emails.' The company NSO Group has admitted to have sold it to so called "vetted government agencies" to be used against major criminals and terrorists. 

But here, it seems the spyware has landed in the wrong hands. Some 50,000 names were leaked to be under the radar of screening worldwide. Mr. Macron apparently features to be one of them. According to BBB news, no one has been spared. The ones whose instruments might be hacked includes the prime ministers of Pakistan, Egypt and Morocco and the presidents of Iraq and South Africa. It's unclear if every contact on the leaked list was hacked.

Privacy is at risks with such companies developing such spyware which when it gets into the wrong hands, can create irrefutable personal damage. The spyware is apparently the one used to hack into the records and personal life of a well known journalist, Jamal Khashoggi who was later assassinated in Iran. 

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