Apple announced Tuesday that it is suing the NSO Group, claiming the Israeli company broke U.S. law by selling ways to hack into its iPhones.
In the lawsuit, filed Monday, Apple said NSO’s elite program that can remotely hack into its flagship product — iPhones — was the work of “amoral 21st century mercenaries”.
The tech giant sought to block the company from using any Apple product, a move that would demolish NSO’s current business model if enforced.
“State-sponsored actors like the NSO Group spend millions of dollars on sophisticated surveillance technologies without effective accountability. That needs to change,” Craig Federighi, Apple’s senior vice president of software engineering, said in a company announcement.
NSO has in recent years gone from being a little-known Israeli security company to emerging as one of the most notorious purveyors of digital tools that break into iPhones through previously unknown software vulnerabilities. The company has long insisted that it only leases its technology to legitimate governments for the purposes of tracking criminals and enforcing laws and interests.
Those claims have been countered by cybersecurity researchers who discovered NSO software used by governments to spy on human rights activists and journalists around the world.
“Thousands of lives were saved around the world thanks to NSO Group’s technologies used by its customers,” a company spokesperson stated in an emailed statement.
“Pedophiles and terrorists can freely operate in technological safe-havens, and we provide governments the lawful tools to fight it. NSO Group will continue to advocate for the truth,” the spokesperson added.
Apple’s lawsuit makes it the second major tech company to sue the company, after WhatsApp filed a similar lawsuit in 2018.
John Scott-Railton, a researcher at the University of Toronto’s Citizen Lab, which has conducted the most thorough public research of governments’ abuses of NSO tools, called the suit “extremely welcome from the point of view of protecting civil society”.
“The mercenary spyware problem has got totally out of hand,” he said, adding, “One by one, tech companies are recognizing that they can’t solve this problem simply through technical means.”
“Otherwise they’re always going to be playing catch-up,” he continued, stating, “They’re realizing it’s time to take spyware to court.”
The suit is the latest in a string of problems NSO has had to deal with this month.
In early November, the U.S. Department of Commerce blacklisted the company, saying its products “maliciously target government officials, journalists, businesspeople, activists, academics, and embassy workers”.
CEO Isaac Benbenisti resigned several days later after only a few days on the job.