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US Judge Permanently Bans NSO Group from Targeting WhatsApp Users

The court found that NSO had reverse-engineered WhatsApp’s code and repeatedly updated its spyware to evade detection and security fixes.

 

A U.S. federal judge has issued a permanent injunction barring Israeli spyware maker NSO Group from targeting WhatsApp users with its notorious Pegasus spyware, marking a landmark victory for Meta following years of litigation. 

The decision, handed down by Judge Phyllis J. Hamilton in the Northern District of California, concludes a legal battle that began in 2019, when Meta (the parent company of WhatsApp) sued NSO after discovering that about 1,400 users—including journalists, human rights activists, lawyers, political dissidents, diplomats, and government officials—had been surreptitiously targeted through “zero-click” Pegasus exploits.

The court found that NSO had reverse-engineered WhatsApp’s code and repeatedly updated its spyware to evade detection and security fixes, causing what the judge described as “irreparable harm” and undermining WhatsApp’s core promise of privacy and end-to-end encryption. The injunction prohibits NSO not only from targeting WhatsApp users but also from accessing or assisting others in accessing WhatsApp’s infrastructure, and further requires NSO to erase any data gathered from targeted users.

This victory for Meta was significant, but the court also reduced the previously awarded damages from $168 million to just $4 million, finding the original punitive sum excessive despite NSO’s egregious conduct. Nevertheless, the ruling sets a precedent for how U.S. tech companies can use the courts to combat mercenary spyware operations and commercial surveillance firms that compromise user privacy.

NSO Group argued that the permanent ban could “drive the company out of business,” pointing out that Pegasus is its flagship product used by governments ostensibly for fighting crime and terrorism. An NSO spokesperson claimed the ruling would not impact existing government customers, but Meta and digital rights advocates insist this bans NSO from ever targeting WhatsApp and holds them accountable for civil society surveillance.

The case highlights the ongoing tension between tech giants and commercial spyware vendors and signals a new willingness by courts to intervene to protect user privacy against advanced cyber-surveillance tools.
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