tv Frontline PBS January 3, 2023 10:00pm-11:00pm PST
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>> pegasus... pegasue... pegasue. .. >> which has been used to monitor and track journalists, human rights activists, and dissidents across the globe. >> narrator: in collaboration with forbidden films, a two-part investigation... >> we immediately realized that this story would be huge. >> nso was established with an ambition to make the world a safer place... >> narrator: into powerful spyware... >> it is a military weapon used against civilians. >> this is extremely serious for democracies... >> narrator: used around the world... >> there is no control over how countries use it, and they have been using it in the worst way you could imagine.
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>> narrator: now on frontline part one of “global spyware scandal: exposing pegasus. >> frontline is made possible by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. and by the corporation for public broadcasting. additional support is provided by the abrams foundation, committed to excellence in journalism... the john d. and catherine t. macarthur foundation committed to building a more just, verdant and peaceful world. more at macfound.org. park foundation, dedicated to heightening public awareness of critical issues... the heising simons foundation, unlocking knowledge, opportunity and possibilities. at hsfoundation.org. and by the frontline journalism fund with major support from jon and jo ann hagler. and additional support from laura debonis.
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♪ ♪ >> our phones are not just our phones. we call them phones, but they're not phones, they're computers. and they're like extensions of our body. they're with us all of the time. and if they are turned into a surveillance device, i don't think it's an exaggeration to say this was something that even george orwell in "1984" couldn't imagine. ♪ ♪ it's beyond science fiction. ♪ ♪ >> laurent richard (in french): ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ (multiple international journalists saying "pegasus") >> this technology, it's so far ahead of government regulation and even of public understanding of what's happening out there. ♪ ♪ >> all of us suspected that if nso group was giving authoritarian and repressive regimes such a powerful instrument of surveillance, that it was pretty likely that this technology would be abused. but none of us had been able to prove it on a systemic scale. ♪ ♪ >> de acuerdo con la pesquisa acabada
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por "the washington post," "the guardian," "le monde" y otros medios... >> a joint investigation by 17 news outlets and forbidden stories... >> activists, lawyers, and journalists are reportedly among those who have been targeted by... >> phone numbers belonging to some big name politicians. >> (in mandarin): ♪ ♪ >> richard (in english): the device that you have in your pocket could be a spy that is spying on your life. ♪ ♪ (car horn honks)
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♪ ♪ the list doesn't have any names. you have phone numbers, area country code, some timestamps as well. and it's a list that is about 50,000 phone numbers from 2016 to 2020. we can't explain where the list is coming from. we can't, of course, reveal who is our source. >> the numbe >> officially, the pegasus spyware is not working on any plus one u.s. phone numbers. it's not possible. most of these governments are known to be clients of nso group who make pegasus. >> pegasus was designed to infect phones like iphones or androids. and once in the phone it can extract and access everything from the device-- the phone books, geolocation, the messages, the photos,
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even the encrypted messages sent by signal whatsapp. it can even access the mic or the camera of your phone remotely. ♪ ♪ >> it's like a person over your shoulder, a person who will see what you are seeing, a person who would watch what you are watching, your emails, your encrypted communication, everything. so, once you are infected, you're trapped. ♪ ♪ >> hello? can you hear me? >> i can hear you. i don't see you. >> hello. >> hello, paul. hello, laurent. >> hi, dana. >> (on laptop): hi, how are you? >> hi, dana. >> good, and you? we decided to reach out to some partners; "the washington post," "the guardian," and many other ones. we wanted to tell you about some information we have and about a new project we are starting. >> we had no names attached to the numbers. we needed more journalists.
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we needed reporters on the ground who could reach out to some victims. we need people with tech expertise. we still have to identify numbers. many of them actually haven't been identified yet. so we'll need your help on this. >> the moment they mentioned the numbers of phone numbers that they had, the quantity of phone numbers, tens of thousands, i mean, my jaw just hit the floor. >> there is a lot that concern india. >> (on cellphone): ah. >> some people in mexico. >> information about hungary. >> azerbaijan and kazakhstan. if forbidden stories have got data that can identify not just who the customers of nso are, but potentially point in the direction of who the targets are as well, this is a game changer. this could be transformative in terms of our understanding of the whole cyber surveillance industry. >> i specialize in national security rerting. so surveillance is part of my beat, so to speak.
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you could see patterns starting to emerge and you could almost like touch, okay, that might be a story. you know, here's something that's happening in azerbaijan that might be a story. okay, i see what the moroccan story might be. it's like watching a photo emerge in a darkroom. >> we will shortly be arriving at elephant & castle. change here for the bakerloo and northern lines. >> we at the "guardian" have been reporting about nso for long time. we thought it was really important to hold this company to account. israel has become a world leader in this industry and exports these tools all over the world. and, if you like, nso group was in many ways, you know, the jewel in the crown. >> the nso group was recently valued at $1 billion. it is one of the most successful companies in israel's start-up space. >> nso says they sell the software
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to governments around the world for legitimate purposes-- fighting terrorism, or violating local laws. >> here was a company founded by three guys in 2010, that claim to have 40 countries around the world buying its technology. that made bold claims about its technology being used to solve serious crimes and help facilitate national security enquiries. this was a big deal. >> i can tell you on the last ten years, we only found three cases of misuse and we took very serious action that we are always taking. and these serious actions meant that we shut down the system completely. we only sell it to governments or to entities that we know
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or we want to believe that they will not misuse the tools. and this is how we check the customer. this is how we diligence them. we have all the mechanism to make sure that they are not misusing the systems. in the middle of paris, in the middle of this big covid crisis, we got everyone together to plan the investigation. >> thank you. sorry about that. i'm dana priest at the "washington post" and this is craig timberg who's joining me. >> this is carmen aristegui and sebastién barragán from "aristegui noticias." >> this is paul lewis from the "guardian." and steph, many of you will know, writes a lot about nso. >> this is the "le monde" corner.
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this is martin, christophe, and i'm damien. >> usually, we see reporters at other news organizations as our rivals. we compete against them. we never want to share information with them because, you know, we want to keep our stories to ourselves. and this is just a different way of operating. this seeing other journalists as partners. >> we are really one group. one group with one goal-- publish those complex stories... (voiceover): we worked with more than 80 journalists. and we set publication date of july 2021 that gave us about a year to investigate the leaked list. the the names behind the for all the pphone numbers. identify that was crucial. withhone numbers only we can do nothing. the data is the beginning of the project. we need to find sources. we need to go on the field. this projects about who is spying on who in many countries,
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and those countries, most of them are very dangerous. ♪ ♪ >> we had a kaleidoscope of potential victims. we have the data, but how do we prove that pegasus was on the phones? and that was always going to be the hardest thing about this project, which was we had data, ich is a very good indication of who the persons of interest were to these government clients of nso, but we couldn't know whether a phone had been hacked unless we conducted forensics on it. ♪ ♪ >> claudio guarnieri is the head of amnesty international's security lab. he worked on creating a methodology, a platform that we could use during our invtigation to have phones analyzed. he's a key element of that investigation. without his expertise, nobody in our team
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would have been able to detect traces of pegasus in a phone. >> it's a piece of code that look very similarly to all t others that you are running on your phone, and it's just designed to do something that it shouldn't. pegasus access files on the device, access and records on the device, being from whatsapp, being from the sms database that you have on the phone, or access on the gps of the device, record the audio, access the webcam. these kinds of things. apple and companies like it try to create as many layers of complication as possible for an attacker. but the unfortunate reality is that against capabilities like those that pegasus customers have, there's not much you can do from a digital security perspective. you can't really stop them meaningfully. you can only try to make it more complicated.
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♪ ♪ (indistinct chatter) >> at some point we discover very crucial information; an information that change entirely the project. for years we heard rumors about the pegasus spyware might have been used against jamal khashoggi, who was killed in 2018 in the consulate of the saudis in istanbul. ♪ ♪ >> the minute we found out about this list, the first thing we all did was to check for any numbers related to jamal khashoggi or anyone we knew who was associated with him.
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and right away, we found two numbers associated with the two women closest to him in his life. jamal khashoggi's murder, really in the history of the "post," stands out. he was an opinion writer for the "washington post." very gentle, soft-spoken man. his voice became very important because he was the single most important dissident writing about the saudi regime. >> jamal, let me start with you. you've compared your crown prince to putin, to iran's supreme leader. you've said he's creating, "an interesting form of dictatorship." how so? >> i still see him as a reformer but he is gathering all power within his hand.
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as we speak today, there are saudi intellectuals and journalists jailed. >> his murder was so cold blooded. and we, we still don't have the whole story. jamal went to the consulate in istanbul and then he disappeared. >> senior turkish officials have reported that he is in fact in the building and he is still here. his close friends and family are still trying to figure out what this situation is. they're waiting on an official statement. i spoke to his fiancée who was also here o told us that they came here to issue a number of documents so they could marry. >> they dispatched an assassination team that landed in a plane in the, in the airport, and came in cars with tools to hack him up, hack his bones, and carry him out in a suitcase or suitcases.
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(scoffs) ♪ ♪ pretty soon after his murder, people started asking, was pegasus used against jamal? >> the word is that you sold pegasus to them and then they turned it around to get kashoggi. >> khashoggi's murder is horrible. really horrible. and therefore when i first heard the accusations that our technology had been used on jamal khashoggi or on his relatives, i started an immediate check about it. and i can tell you, very clear, we had nothing to do with this horrible murder. ♪ ♪ >> i'm hoping that hatice, kashoggi's fiancée,
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who we'd all gotten to know on television because she was outside the consulate when he didn't reappear, i'm hoping that hatice will let us do forensics on her phone to see for certain whether she was targeted, and maybe if we get lucky, whether we can see what they took out of her phone. ♪ ♪ they killed my future. they killed my life. i felt inside me something changed and broke. >> do you feel like your phone is doing anything strange?
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do you think it could be hacked? we can test it so we could do that if, if you wanted to do it? we... >> okay, you can do that. >> okay, that'd be great. we just need to plug your phone into our computer. >> okay. >> so maybe we do that. great. (birds twittering) >> (on speakerphone): hello? >> claudio? >> all right. >> it's dana. >> hi. how are you? >> i don't know, you tell me. >> so i checked both the uploads. the new one seems clean. the old one, however, has some traces on the 6th of october 2018 which was followed by some additional traces on the ninth. and then on the 12th. there is also an additional record
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in june of 2019. but that seems to be probably a failed attempt and i don't see anything following that. >> okay. the analysis proved that the phone belonging to jamal kashoggi's fiancée had been infected with pegasus. then we find out the date, which is four days after his murder, when she's still trying to figure out what's happening. and it just seemed like such a ballsy move to surveil the person who has become the public face of his disappearance. ♪ ♪
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we learned that jamal had a complicated personal life. hanan atr is probably the least known character in jamal khashoggi's life. she's actually his wife. and most people have not heard of her. he had secretly married in the united states in an islamic ceremony. what i discovered is hanan is living in hiding in the united states while she waits for her political asylum case. she was a flight attendant for emirate airlines, and so she flew all over the world, and she was communicating with him on foreign phones. ♪ ♪ >> he was so happy and i was so happy as well.
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this is in his birthday in the restaurant in washington, and his friend maggie behind us, is the one she made the birthday party. this all of his friends around us. this last birthday in his life. he was careful, but he didn't realize maybe my device is much dangerous, and i didn't know as well. he suspect, but he's not sure, and i am not sure as well. >> she allowed me to download her phone d a copy to claudio and to bill marczak at citizen lab, who also conducts forensic analysis. >> what i did is i analyzed all the available data on two android phones
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and, and one laptop belonging to hanan. on one of the phones, it appears that there were two separate links to the pegasus spyware that were actually opened. >> before jamal's murder, hanan had been detained and interrogated in the united arab emirates, which is of course a close ally of saudi arabia. >> they took me to a office in the airport. then they took me to my house. they searched the whole house. they take my devices, my family devices. they have the password. i was in investigation for 17 hours, until i got tired, i slept on the floor. >> what bill discovered was when she was detained at the u.a.e. airport, somebody who took her phone then opened a browser on her phone, and then typed in a url that then directed the phone to a website known to citizen lab
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as being a pegasus website that activates the infection. >> the link to pegasus was actually typed into the web browser, character by character. they made a couple of typos actually while they were doing it which tells me it was done manually. we have the smoking gun from hanan's phone which is the traces of the spyware. you know, almost certainly the spyware was installed and exfiltrated information from, from her phone. so she was, in my view, monitored. >> he was telling me what he's doing, and what his connection, what his movement, what is his state of mind. so you were communicating with him. >> a lot. they tracked my husband through me, a long time back, before they kill him because he was telling me, only me, everything. ♪ ♪
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i didn't know this much they track him through me all the time. >> mm-hmm. >> yeah. >> why is this all come in my life? they did track jamal, and to kill him through me, long time back. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> getting evidence on the device of hanan, on the device of hatice, all of that was breaking the narrative of the c.e.o. of nso group
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who told to the press that that spyware were never used against the... jamal or the relatives of jamal. ♪ ♪ in the list, we saw more than 15,000 mexican numbers. mexico was one of the very first customers of the nso group. one of mexico's best-known journalists is carmen aristegui and she was part of our investigation. ♪ ♪ she has maybe more followers than the president of mexico. and we needed to understand who those phone numbers in mexico belongs to. (phone chiming)
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>> carmen: hola. >> hola, carmen, es arthuro de "forbidden stories." ¿cómo estás? >> carmen: ¿cómo estás? qué gusto. forbidden tuvo un universo de más de 50,000 números, pero había que saber de quién eran esos números. se tenía que investigar uno por uno. >> arthur: y, carmen, hay muchos contactos de tu teléfono en nuestra lista. >> carmen: uf. okey. >> arthur: lo que, lo que podemos hacer ahora es que puedes entrar los números en tu teléfono para decirme a quién pertenecen los números. >> carmen: así lo vamos a hacer. (muttering) >> tengo un directorio nutrido y entonces ese directorio lo cruzamos con los números de forbidden y los números de mi directorio. el tercero es, sandra nogales que por muchos años fue mi asistente.
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¡ah, caray! tengo aquí una sorpresa. el séptimo número corresponde a karina maciel. karina maciel es la productora de mi programa en la cadena de televisión cnn en méxico. otro colega periodista de la revista processo, alejadro caballero. al cruzar, empezaron a salir nombres, nombres, nombres, nombres, nombres y nosotros decíamos: ¿hasta dónde va a terminar esto? ah, caray, el que sigue es alejandro encinas, es un muy importante político de la izquierda. y estaban ahí políticos, diplomáticos, abogados, periodistas, activistas, defensores de derechos humanos. ah, caray. (laughs) bueno, aquí te puedo decir que está mi hermana.
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aquí aparece mi hermana, teresa aristegui flores. es mi hermana, pero no está relacionada con ninguna actividad pública. yo intuyo que aquí nadie se salva, si hicieron esto, imagínate, ya perdieron el pudor. ósea, pudieron haber espiado a su gato, ¿no? a su perro, al canario. (laughs) ósea... ¿estás de acuerdo? a su propia familia. >> we knew from a previous investigation that carmen's phone was heavily targeted with pegasus in 2015 and 2016. so from that date, she is still investigating nso group, the pegasus spyware or the agents and operators who are using that in mexico.
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>> carmen: durante los años que fui espiada, estuvimos realizando investigaciones periodísticas importantes para méxico relacionadas con la casa blanca del presidente enrique peña nieto. una casa en un barrio muy lujoso de la ciudad de méxico, en posesión del presidente de méxico, de enrique peña nieto, y de su familia, que no podían explicar. que desde luego no podía haber obtenido el presidente con los ingresos que el presidente pudo haber tenido como presidente, como gobernador o como hijo de una familia de clase media. ♪ ♪ es que yo sospecho que mi teléfono está intervenido y el teléfono de mi hijo emilio está intervenido es cuando emilio, un chico menor de edad, me pregunta:
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"¿oye, mamá, eh, tú sabes por qué recibo estos mensajes tan extraños?" y yo le digo: "yo también estoy reciendo mensajes extraños." ♪ ♪ (chattering indistinctly) que hicieras clic para ver algún problema de tu visa en estados unidos. >> claro, claro, claro, ¿qué puede estar mal con tu visa, no? >> cmen: sí, pero era imposible que no hicieras clic. >> a ver, yo veía mi visa y decía, pues que vigencia tiene... tiene. fuera de la vigencia, ¿qué problema puede tener? pero, sabe, es algo que es inevitable, que hagas un clic. >> que les piques. sabemos que pegasus se vendió a la procuraduría general de la república, se vendió pegasus al ejército, se vendió pegasus al cisen, al sistema de inteligencia, se vendió pegasus a algunas instancias de caracter publico.
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>> source (voice distorted): no puedo decirles mi nombre. no puedo referir con exactitud la institución en la cual me desempeñé. y puede resultar peligroso para mí la identificación y el conocimiento de que yo tengo o tuve acceso a cierta información. el sistema pegasus, pues era toda una novedad para nosotros. el procedimiento era tener el número objetivo, hacer lo que se denominaba la ingeniería social, que es búsqueda de información en fuentes abiertas del objetivo con la finalidad de elaborar mensajes de texto que pudieran ser enviados al dispositivo móvil.
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debiera ser uno o dos intentos muy precisos con información que le resultara útil al objetivo y que este pudiera dar clic. si lográbamos el éxito de que diera clic en el mensaje, eso automáticamente instalaba el software en el equipo móvil, y a partir de ahí, ya podíamos tener acceso al teléfono, a toda la información. los resultados, pues, eran increíbles porque una vez que se lograba instalar infectar el dispositivo, se tenía acceso pleno al equipo móvil. era una pantalla negra. en la parte superior izquierda teníamos visualización principal y en la parte del lado derecho y abajo estaban, digamos, módulos o pestañas en donde enía cada una de las aplicaciones de las que se extraía información.
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por ejemplo, teníamos el cuadro de la aplicación de whatsapp, telegram. abajo teníamos los micrófonos, el micrófono, las cámaras, la geolocalización y dependiendo de lo que nos interesara, le dábamos clic y era lo que se proyecba en la visualización principal. a partir de la infección cualquier informión que sea eliminad podemos verla nosotros. y a sea en fotos o conversaciones. pero podemos seguir viéndolas. >> carmen: cuando empiezas a saber qué cosa es pegasus, te vas de espaldas. quedas desnudo frente a un poder que no sabes quién detenta. quedas vulnerable frente a alguien
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que está observándote bajo una lupa. pueden estar contigo en la oficina, en la regadera, en la cocina con un amigo, con una fuente. todo el tiempo. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> all the time during this investigation, we tried every day to identify the person behind that phone number. (indistinct phone chatter) this is what all the partners in forbidden's team were doing most of the time.
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(sighs) >> i saw one number in the list that belonged to a friend, a journalistn azerbaijan. >> her name is khadija ismayilova. she's an award-winning investigative reporter and an outspoken critic of the government, renowned for her exposés of corruption at the hands of the country's president. >> azerbaijan, you have a lot of oil and gas. it's a dictatorship. and the dictator's name is ilham aliyev. and this person and this state is extremely violent against dissidents, political opponents, journalists. >> i first met khadija ismayilova in azerbaijan in about 2006, 2007.
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khadija ismayilova relentlessly kept on exposing the wrongdoing and the corruption of the aliyev regime. she showed how, you know, they were having their hands into a bnk of the azerbaijani economy. huig she was showing how they were, you know, taking money in a covert way, how they were stealing money, basically, from the people. >> (speaking azerbaijani): (shouting) >> she kept on doing what she was doing. and she got arrested. she got thrown behind bars. after all this investigating reporting, khadija became a prime target for the government in baku and for the aliyevs.
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>> i don't know how to, to proceed with khadija, because i don't want us to put khadija in danger. the thing that is quite difficult is how to get in touch with khadija without communicating on electronic device. >> this is very sensitive, right? >> yeah. >> this is very, very sensitive, especially for her, because she's basically on probation. that's gonna be a risk anyway. >> we learned that khadija was about to go to turkey for some personal reasons, and so we set up immediately a team who went to turkey to meet khadija once she landed in the airport. ♪ ♪
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and you're among them. >> oh! >> and then we also have some people who are your friends. > okay, and what does that program do? >> so what the program does is, it basically, without you knowing, um, it installs things on your phone and then it allows... >> even if i didn't click on anything? >> yes, so the srecy of this, it's called pegasus, and the secrecy of it is that you don't actually see or you don't do anything. so before, you had to click on something, to be infected. in this case, it all happens in the background, and you have no idea that you are infected. and when you're infected, it's transmitting your messages your images, everything that's happening on your phone, including on signal, because they have the phone itself.
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>> and it's legal to sell it? >> yes, so what we know is that most likely, sometimes in 2018, the government got it. >> okay. >> and we have a lot of data sometimes in 2018, the gofrom 2019.ot it. and, you know, that was a big year of protest. you were on a hunger strike with other people. >> yeah, yeah. you guys had a woman march. >> yeah. >> you were leading the march. >> (quietly): (bleep) (laughs) >> it's... kind of the most, like, in the country. so one way for us to verify that, you know, what exactly, you know, was done in your case would be to do forensic on your phone. >> yes, why not? is there any way to avoid this surveillance? >> yes, we will set you up with a new device that you will be able to use.
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>> and a phone. >> is there a balcony? >> ...be some way, you know, to do it like... there are other ways to communicate. >> yeah. it's like... it makes you to want to live in the bubble. but th, like, so no one can enter. like, in some sort of... like living, like living inside the condom. but then you cannot reproduce. ♪ ♪
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>> that's her phone. you don't need any cables? >> nope. >> okay. >> do you know if she still has the backup of the phone? >> yes, she does. yes, she does. >> okay. well, right now i'm trying to jailbreak the phone. (phone chimes) hopefully, it works. so right now, i am... navigating through the phone.
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so i'm looking for things that might have executed network activity that is connectable to the company, any leftovers of malicious executions. um, accounts that we know of-- anything, essentially, that tells me the history of this phone. that's interesting, that's not something i've seen before. we see processes that we know are connected to pegasus, we see some imessage accounts that are connected to the attacks. because this might indicate what was the entry point. oh, it was apple music, what the (bleep)? >> oh, really? >> that's, that's weird.
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>> so they might have started using apple music to exploit it? >> um... i have to do some more digging on this, because i need to look at what specificallthese applications are. she's definitelymong the ones most targeted. ♪ ♪ it's important to rectify this story which is that these technologies are exclusively used for good purposes and for fighting evil and for fighting crime and terrorism and all that. (dog barking) >> okay, so-- no, khadija is coming. (chuckles) >> hi, claudio. >> (on phone): hi.
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>> so now tell me how bad it is. >> (on phone): okay, there are definitely some records that, that indicate various points where the phone seemed to have been compromised. >> mm-hmm. >> (voiceover): so i started feeling like a plague doctor in the 1300s. i'm basically kind of just keeping the death count. i'm contributing to creating a trauma here, and i can see it in many cases, like i can see it, that they are right now, they're going through a dramatic moment, and i'm like that person in the room that is breaking it. (on phone): there are also some more recent records from even as recent as early may of this year, so until a couple of weeks ago. but all in all, it seems like
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this probably extended between 2019 and 2020. 2020 at the very least. >> i've been told that you will not know what exactly had been monitored or recorded. >> yeah, with this kinds of... kind of monitoring technology, the point where they have that level of access to the device, virtually everything is possible, so... >> yeah, thank you. have a good day, bye-bye. bye. >> that's not great news. >> yeah. all night i've been thinking about what did i do with my phone? and i feel guilty. i feel guilty to... for the messages i've sent.
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i feel guilty for the information sources that, that... who send me, thinking that some encrypted messaging ways are secure. they did it and they didn't know that my phone is infected. i mean, my family members are also victimized. the... the sources are victimized, everyone. i mean, people i've been working with, people who told me their private secrets are victimized. everyone, i mean, it's not just me. i, i put so many people in danger. and... and i'm angry. again, i'm angry, i'm angry with the gernment, i'm angry with the companies that produce all these tools and sell it to the bad guys, like aliyev's regime.
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it, it's... it's really... it's despicable. it's heinous. >> khadija is not a terrorist, khadija is not a criminal. she's a journalist that is taking a lot of risk to write some stories to make sure people will get access to independent information. so that was one more evidence of the global misuse of that spyware. ♪ ♪ >> powerful governments manage to retain their power by seeing off threats
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from people who are campaigning for democracy or holding them to account, telling the truth. and, you know, here's a company that gave them a tool to do that. >> it's a military weapon used against civilians. and the civilians, they don't have any mechanism to help them in seeking justice, any mechanism to find some traces, any mechanisms to know that at least they a the target. >>ou got a real sense that it was free for all. that there is no control over how countries use it, and they have been using it in e worst way you could imagine. >> even after months of investigating we kept discovering new things new names from the list-- politicians, heads of state, and even a princess. >> hello, my name is latifa al-maktoum.
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and i'm making this video because it could be the last video i make, yeah. (sighs) ♪ ♪ (music ends) narrator: next time... >> an explosive investigation... >> nso group targeted by the phone spyware pegasus... >> narrator: the investigation continues... >> the stakes are really high when you do this kind of reporting... >> i'm not going to respond to questions regarding specific customers. >> you have here a go to spy service for tyrants. >> nobody regulates these companies that's the bottom line. >> go to pbs.org/frontline for a q&a with the journalists at forbidden stories who led the pegasus investigation. >> and once on the phone it can extract and access everything
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from the device. >> everything, so once you are infected, you're trapped. >> and an archive of stories with our reporting partners on the pegasus project. connect with frontline on facebook, instagram and twitter, and stream anytime on the pbs app, youtube or pbs.org/frontline. >> frontline is made possible by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. and by the corporation for public broadcasting. additional support is provided by the abrams foundation, committed to excellence in journalism... the john d. and catherine t. macarthur foundation committed to building a more just, verdant and peaceful world. more at macfound.org. park foundation, dedicated to heightening public awareness of critical issues... the heising simons foundation, unlocking knowledge, opportunity and possibilities. at hsfoundation.org.
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and by the frontline journalism fund with major support from jon and jo ann hagler. and additional support from laura debonis. captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org. >> for more on this and other frontline programs visit our website at pbs.org/frontline. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ frontline's "global spyware scandal: exposing pegasus" is available on amazon prime video.
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>> funding for this program provided by... ♪♪ ♪♪ additional support provided by... ♪♪ ♪♪ support for this program was also made possible by... ♪♪ [ ship horn blows ] [ cheering ] >> after almost four years swept up in world war two, america's youth was finally home from europe and the pacific in the mid 1940s. [ car horns honking ] millions would finish up their education either in high school
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