In one particularly appalling case, authorities in Azerbaijan arrested and tortured 45 gay men and transgender women shortly after the country began using surveillance technology created by Verint Systems, an Israeli tech giant. A source who worked with Verint products in Azerbaijan told Haaretz that the firm’s technology was being used to “check sexual inclinations via Facebook.”

Similarly, in Indonesia, Verint products were used to create a database of LGBTQ rights activists and spy on religious minorities.

Repressive regimes have also used Israeli technology to track dissidents. As Haaretz notes, Pegasus spyware—developed by the Israeli firm NGO Group—was used by Saudi Arabia in an attempt to track prominent dissident Omar Abdulaziz, who is living in Canada under political asylum.

As Haaretz notes, exports of spy technology “are approved by the [Israeli] Defense Exports Control Agency (a unit in the Defense Ministry),” and subsequent abuses of the technology are justified on the grounds that it is impossible to know how purchasers of these products will put them to use.

But according to one anonymous source cited by Haaretz, Israeli firms “are continuing to sell offensive cyber capabilities to Mexico… even after it became known that they were being used against civilians.”

“Another example of a decision to go on doing business with those who abuse the surveillance capabilities is Colombia,” Haaretz notes. “In 2015, the British nonprofit Privacy International revealed that Verint… had supplied the Bogota police with systems to intercept phone conversations, and that the technology was used to surveil opponents of the regime. A source involved in Verint’s deals in Latin America maintains that despite this, the company is continuing to sell its products in Colombia.”

Click Here: Crystal Palace Shop

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Comments

    Categories