Amnesty International warns against sale of spyware

March 29, 2023

Amnesty International has issued a warning against the sale of spyware, one year after the Pegasus Project findings were made public. The human rights organization highlights the lack of a global ban on the sale of spyware, which has allowed the surveillance industry to flourish unabated.

According to a database compiled by researchers at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, governments in at least 75 countries, or nearly 40% of all nations worldwide, have acquired commercial spyware in the last decade. Rival companies such as the Hacking Team and FinFisher have marketed spyware and services similar to Pegasus. Furthermore, the revolving door between veterans of Israel’s military and intelligence branches and its domestic tech sector generates new surveillance start-ups on a regular basis.

Cognyte, which claims to be the market leader in investigative analytics software, secured a deal to supply spyware to Myanmar’s state-backed telecommunications firm a month before the current military junta launched its coup in February 2021.

The use of spyware has a chilling effect on press freedoms and civil society around the world, expanding the scope of authoritarian efforts to impose transnational repression. The proliferation of these technologies, as well as the demand for them from both government and non-government clients, has resulted in a mercenary spyware industry worth an estimated US$12 billion per year.

The sources for this piece include an article in CigiOnline.

Top Stories

Related Articles

December 30, 2025 A fast-moving cyberattack has compromised more than 59,000 internet-facing Next.js servers in less than two days after more...

December 29, 2025 The U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has warned that several of its Internet Time more...

December 29, 2025 A critical security flaw has been found in LangChain, one of the most widely used frameworks for more...

December 23, 2025 South Korea will require facial recognition scans to open new mobile phone accounts. The new rule is more...

Jim Love

Jim is an author and podcast host with over 40 years in technology.

Share:
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn