The documents addressed “the reality of the international surveillance industry” and explained the tech used to spy on mobile users was developed in the United States, Canada, Australia and the United Kingdom. ZDNET explained that the technology may have been sold to several of the regimes in North Africa and the Middle East, and Wikileaks said the technology has been used in Bahrain to track human rights activists.
SS8, a U.S. firm, Hacking Team and Vupen were all named as companies who have created the malware that’s capable of hijacking smartphones. The software can “record every use, movement and even sights and sounds of the room [a phone] is in,” Wikileaks said.
The Wikileaks documents are particularly compelling given the recent revelation that millions of smartphones have spyware called Carrier IQ installed, an application that is capable of allowing wireless carriers to spy on their customers.
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