Tech giants vow to defend users in US as spyware companies make inroads with Trump administration

A picture


Apple and WhatsApp have vowed to keep warning users if their mobile phones are targeted by governments using hacking software against them, including in the US, as two spyware makers seek to make inroads with the Trump administration.The two technology giants made their statements in response to queries from the Guardian as the two cyberweapons makers – both founded in Israel and now owned by American investors – are aggressively pursuing access to the US market.Paragon Solutions, which makes a spyware called Graphite, already cemented a deal with the Trump administration in September to give US immigration agents access to one of the world’s most sophisticated hacking tools, after the Department of Homeland lifted a freeze on a $2m contract with ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement).Paragon did not respond to requests for comment.Another company, NSO Group, which was accused by the Biden administration in 2021 of engaging in business that was “contrary to the national security or foreign policy interests of the US”, announced this weekend that David Friedman, the US ambassador to Israel during Donald Trump’s first term, had agreed to become executive chairman of the holding company that owns NSO.

The company was recently taken over by new investors, reportedly including the American movie producer Robert Simonds.Both Paragon and NSO Group make spyware that can hack into any phone without a user ever knowing.The software can in effect take control of a phone, allowing the spyware user to read a targeted individual’s texts, listen to calls, track their location, and transform any mobile phone into a listening device or remote camera.The companies have defended their software, saying their products are meant to be used to fight serious crime, and even thwart possible terror attacks, but both companies’ spyware has also been abused by government clients to hack individuals they want to monitor secretly, from journalists to business leaders to human rights activists.For years, two technology companies – Apple and WhatsApp – have taken a tough stance against the proliferation of spyware around the world and have alerted individuals through notifications when possible hacking attacks are detected, including in cases in Italy, Spain, India and dozens of other countries.

A US court in October sided with WhatsApp when, after six years of litigation, it banned NSO from ever targeting WhatsApp users again.But both Apple and WhatsApp’s owner, Meta, also have a close relationship with the Trump administration, leading to concerns over whether they would continue to alert individuals in the event such spyware attacks occurred against users in the US.In a statement, Apple said: “Threat notifications are designed to inform and assist users who may have been individually targeted by mercenary spyware and geographic location is not a factor in who they are sent to.”A spokesperson for WhatsApp said: “WhatsApp’s priority is to protect our users by disrupting hacking efforts by mercenary spyware, building new layers of protection and alerting people whose device has come under threat, no matter where they are in the world.”Christopher Wray, the former FBI director, has testified that the FBI tested NSO’s Pegasus for possible use, but that the bureau ultimately decided against including the commercial spyware in its arsenal.

Experts say many legal questions surround whether spyware could ever legally be used domestically in the US given laws that prohibit targeted surveillance of Americans.An aide to Ron Wyden, a Democratic senator and member of the select committee on intelligence, said current immigration officials provided an initial briefing to his office in which they indicated their “policies are still being written”, but have not responded to follow-up emails since the government shutdown began in October.Asked whether he would seek to have sanctions that were placed on NSO by the Biden administration in 2021 removed, Friedman said by phone from Israel: “I hope that will be accomplished, but we haven’t made that request yet” and said he had not yet discussed the matter with Trump.The former ambassador added that it was “too soon to know” when NSO would seek to have those sanctions lifted.“Nobody is protected” when it comes to mercenary spyware, cautioned John Scott-Railton, a senior researcher at the Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto, who is one of the world’s leading experts in tracking and disrupting the use of spyware tools against members of civil society around the world.

“American businesses aren’t ready to start detecting and defending against this kind of threat at home.Nor is anybody else, by the way.Not hospitals, not lawyers and judges, not politicians, and certainly not regular citizens,” he said.“The last thing America needs right now is a silent spyware epidemic.”Paragon first entered an agreement with ICE in 2024, under the Biden administration.

Several people who spoke on the condition of anonymity said the relatively small contract had slipped under the White House’s radar until it was reported by Wired.The contract was then paused in order to determine whether the contract met the requirements of an ambitious executive order that had been signed by the White House in May 2023 and prohibited the operational use of spyware that poses “risks to national security or has been misused by foreign actors to enable human rights abuses around the world”.At that time, Paragon was not associated with any surveillance scandals, unlike NSO Group, whose Pegasus spyware has been used by governments to target civil society in dozens of cases.But that changed in January 2025, when WhatsApp said it had discovered that 90 people, including journalists and members of civil society, had been targeted by Paragon’s Graphite.Paragon subsequently ended its relationship with the Italian government, suggesting Italy had violated terms of service that prohibit the spyware from being used against members of civil society.

Since then, media reports have described how several Italian journalists, at least two Italian business executives, including the chief executive of one of Italy’s largest banks, Italian human rights activists, and an Italian political strategist, were each targeted with the hacking spyware in 2024,The government of the current prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, has acknowledged the software was used against some activists by an Italian agency with legal authority, but has not claimed responsibility for other high-profile targeting,“This is the Italian Watergate,” said Matteo Renzi, the former Italian prime minister, in an interview,“This is a tool only a government can use,If the Italian government continues to deny they have used this against [multiple Italian business executives] and journalists, then the question is, who did?” he said.

“I am not the best friend of journalists, but the freedom of the press is a priority in a liberal democracy.For me, it is unacceptable to use this tool against journalists.”The prospect of Graphite now being in the hands of US immigration officials has some senior figures worried.“ICE is already shredding due process and ruining lives in its rush to lock up kids and families who pose no threat to anyone,” Wyden said in a statement to the Guardian.“I’m extremely concerned about how ICE will use spyware, facial recognition and other technology to further trample on the rights of Americans and anyone who Donald Trump labels as an enemy.

”A spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security did not respond to a request for comment,
cultureSee all
A picture

Die My Love to Rosalía’s Lux: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

Lynne Ramsay’s latest is a portrait of a relationship in decline, while the Spanish nu-flamenco star enlists a plethora of talent for her latest albumDie My LoveOut now Lynne Ramsay’s remarkable portrait of a couple spiralling emotionally in the wake of the birth of their child sees Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattinson go hell for leather in a pair of no-holds barred performances that chart the journey from passion to … well, it would be too simple to call it hatred. J-Law in particular seems likely to bag herself an Oscar nom for this one.Predator: BadlandsOut now This standalone film set in the Predator universe sees Elle Fanning’s Weyland-Yutani android character team up with Dimitrius Schuster-Koloamatangi’s young, outcast Predator warrior, in a bid to survive a thoroughly hostile environment. Horror sci-fi directed by Dan Trachtenberg.The ChoralOut now For a certain audience, the prospect of a Nicholas Hytner-directed, Alan Bennett-scripted comedy-drama (their last collaboration was 2015’s The Lady in the Van, starring Maggie Smith), starring Ralph Fiennes, with Simon Russell Beale playing the composer Elgar and Roger Allam in the mix too, will be cinematic catnip, some slightly mixed reviews notwithstanding

A picture

Seth Meyers: ‘Trump has no idea what regular people are going through and he doesn’t care’

Late-night hosts discussed Donald Trump’s out-of-touch comments on grocery prices, the longest-ever government shutdown and a dramatic White House press conference on Ozempic.Seth Meyers continued to analyze the results of Tuesday’s elections on Thursday evening, examining what fueled major victories for Democrats in Virginia and New Jersey. “If you do look inside the numbers, you’ll see that it wasn’t just anti-Trump backlash that fueled Democrats’ wins,” the Late Night host said. “Voters are also furious about the economy,” especially record-high grocery prices.“So the same thing that we were told was an issue in the last election was still an issue in this election because nothing has been fixed,” Meyers continued

A picture

Seth Meyers on Mamdani’s win: ‘The kind of energy Democrats have been desperately seeking for years’

Late-night hosts reacted to Democrats’ slate of wins across the country and Zohran Mamdani’s historic victory in the New York City mayoral race.On Late Night, Seth Meyers celebrated Mamdani’s historic victory in the New York mayoral race, becoming the first south Asian and Muslim mayor of the biggest city in the US, as well as New York’s first mayoral candidate since 1969 to receive more than a million votes.“This is the kind of energy Democrats have been desperately seeking for years,” said an enthusiastic Meyers. “I haven’t seen a crowd of New Yorkers this excited since the time the real Timotheé Chalamet stopped at a Timotheé Chalamet lookalike contest in Manhattan.“And if you thought Trump was bummed about the results before Mamdani’s speech, he probably felt even worse” when he heard Mamdani say: “Donald Trump, since I know you’re watching, I have four words for you: turn the volume up!”“OK, first of all, you do not need to tell him to turn the volume up,” Meyers joked

A picture

Garden shed of vaccine pioneer Edward Jenner added to heritage at risk register

Hut where father of immunology trialled first smallpox vaccine among 138 additions to Historic England listA rustic, ordinary-looking English garden hut regarded as the birthplace of immunology – revolutionising global public health and saving countless lives – has been added to the nation’s heritage at risk register.The hut belonged to Edward Jenner (1749-1823), regarded as someone who has saved more lives than any other human. It was there that he first trialled a vaccine for smallpox in the late 18th century.The hut, built from brick and rubble stone with a simple thatched roof, was christened “the Temple of Vaccinia” by Jenner.Today the structure in Gloucestershire is in a sorry state and is one of 138 buildings and sites added by Historic England to its annual heritage at risk register

A picture

Miss Piggy movie on way from Jennifer Lawrence, Emma Stone and Cole Escola

Miss Piggy is getting the movie star treatment, courtesy of Jennifer Lawrence and Emma Stone.A feature film about the diva puppet is in the works at Disney, which owns the rights to the Muppets franchise, Variety reported on Wednesday. Lawrence and Stone will serve as producers, working with a script from Oh, Mary! creator Cole Escola.“I don’t know if I can announce this but I am just going to … Emma Stone and I are producing a Miss Piggy movie and Cole is writing it,” Lawrence revealed on Las Culturistas podcast hosted by Bowen Yang and Matt Rogers. When the excited cohosts asked whether Lawrence and Stone, longtime friends and two of the most successful film actors of their generation, would co-star in the project, Lawrence teased: “I think so

A picture

Colbert on Pelosi calling Trump a vile creature: ‘You know who agrees? Most Americans’

Late-night hosts looked back on comments made by Nancy Pelosi about Donald Trump and examined the last-minute campaigning for the New York mayoral race.On The Late Show, Stephen Colbert spoke about the big night for New York. He said that election night in the US is known internationally as “Guys, come look, they’re about to do something stupid!”He spoke about Zohran Mamdani’s late campaign push, hitting multiple clubs and bars in an episode that was taped just before the Democratic candidate made history winning the majority of votes.His major competition, Andrew Cuomo, picked up endorsements from Elon Musk, Eric Adams, George Santos and Stephen Miller, AKA “everyone New Yorkers love”.Colbert also joked that support came from “subway seat puddle” and “your neighbour with the trumpet”