U.S. blacklists Israeli hacking tool vendor NSO Group
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[November 04, 2021] By
Christopher Bing
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. Commerce
Department added Israel's NSO Group and Candiru to its trade blacklist
on Wednesday, saying they sold spyware to foreign governments that used
the equipment to target government officials, journalists and others.
Positive Technologies of Russia, and Computer Security Initiative
Consultancy PTE LTD, from Singapore, were also listed. The Department
said they trafficked in cyber tools used to gain unauthorized access to
computer networks.
The companies' addition to the list, for engaging in activities contrary
to U.S. national security or foreign policy interests, means that
exports to them from U.S counterparts are restricted. It for instance
makes it far harder for U.S. security researchers to sell them
information about computer vulnerabilities.
"We are not taking action against countries or governments where these
entities are located," said a spokesperson for the U.S. State
Department.
Suppliers will need to apply for a license before selling to them, which
is likely to be denied.
In the past, the NSO Group and Candiru have been accused of selling
hacking tools to authoritarian regimes. NSO says it only sells its
products to law enforcement and intelligence agencies and takes steps to
curb abuse.
'DISMAYED'
An NSO spokesperson said the company was "dismayed" by the decision
since its technologies "support U.S. national security interests and
policies by preventing terrorism and crime, and thus we will advocate
for this decision to be reversed."
NSO will present information regarding its "rigorous" compliance and
human rights programs, "which already resulted in multiple terminations
of contacts with government agencies that misused our products," the
spokesperson said in an e-mailed statement to Reuters.
The Israeli defence ministry, which grants export licenses to NSO,
declined to comment on the matter.
Contact information for Candiru was not available.
The Biden administration imposed sanctions on Positive Technologies, a
Russian cybersecurity firm, this year for providing support to Russian
security services. The company denies any wrongdoing.
Positive Technologies said the new sanctions will not affect their
business and will not prevent the company from a planned public listing.
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A fence surrounds the U.S. Department of Commerce in Washington
October 5, 2013. REUTERS/Mike Theiler
"We do not know on what grounds the U.S. Commerce Department added us to the
list," General Director Denis Baranov said in an emailed comment.
"Anyway we repelled sanction risks earlier and they do not pose additional
threats for us now," he wrote.
Computer Security Initiative Consultancy PTE LTD, also known as COSEINC, did not
immediately respond to requests for comment.
A former U.S. official familiar with Positive Technologies, who spoke on
condition of anonymity, said the firm had helped establish computer
infrastructure used in Russian cyberattacks on U.S. organizations.
COSEINC founder Thomas Lim is known for organizing a security conference, named
SyScan, which was sold https://tsyrklevich.net/2015/07/22/hacking-team-0day-market
to Chinese technology firm Qihoo 360, a sanctioned entity. An email published
https://wikileaks.org/hackingteam/emails/
emailid/695766 by WikiLeaks in 2015 suggested Lim had also previously offered to
sell hacking tools to infamous Italian spyware vendor HackingTeam.
Lim did not immediately respond to a request for comment sent to a social media
account he owns.
Export control experts say the designation could have a far broader impact on
the listed companies than simply limiting their access to U.S. technology.
"Many companies choose to avoid doing business with listed entities completely
in order to eliminate the risk of an inadvertent violation and the costs of
conducting complex legal analyses," said Kevin Wolf, former assistant secretary
of Commerce for Export Administration during the Obama administration.
The entity list was increasingly used for national security and foreign policy
aims during the Trump administration. Chinese telecom company Huawei was added
in 2019, cutting it off from some key U.S. suppliers and making it difficult for
them to produce mobile handsets.
(Reporting by Christopher Bing in WashingtonAdditional reporting by Steven
Scheer in Jerusalem and Maria Tsvetkova in MoscowEditing by William Maclean,
Gareth Jones and Matthew Lewis)
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