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European research Organizations (EIC) and Amnesty International have decided to deal a devastating blow to the Intellexa spyware vendor alliance by presenting the results of a joint Predator Files investigation.
The resource combines materials from several national publications devoted to an overview of the company's international structure and its activities in promoting spyware.
The Alliance's corporate units cover various jurisdictions both within and outside the EU.
But more interesting is the Amnesty technical report, which details all Intellexa solutions and attack vectors.
In addition, for the first time, the Predator server part and user interface are revealed, and the ecosystem of supporting Intellexa products designed to deliver spyware to target devices by compromising mobile networks, Wi-Fi, and intercepting Internet traffic is described in detail.
The commercial side of the issue is also touched upon: the price tag for the Intellexa package solution is 8 million euros.
Additionally, a license is offered for 3 million rubles to ensure the persistence of infection in iOS and Android.
In addition, if international targeting is required, Nova International is available for 1.2 million euros, which opens access to 5 additional countries by mutual agreement without geographical restrictions of the target location.
From a technical point of view, the report does not claim to be an exhaustive detailed description of each product, but it is quite informative to get acquainted with and understand the spyware ecosystem.
Nevertheless, specialists and those who are familiar with the topic have not discovered anything new: they are counting on a wide audience and resonance.
Again, the arsenal of US intelligence agencies and ART, which has recently been broadcast by the Chinese infosec, is in reality much more invasive and technological.
The resource combines materials from several national publications devoted to an overview of the company's international structure and its activities in promoting spyware.
The Alliance's corporate units cover various jurisdictions both within and outside the EU.
But more interesting is the Amnesty technical report, which details all Intellexa solutions and attack vectors.
In addition, for the first time, the Predator server part and user interface are revealed, and the ecosystem of supporting Intellexa products designed to deliver spyware to target devices by compromising mobile networks, Wi-Fi, and intercepting Internet traffic is described in detail.
The commercial side of the issue is also touched upon: the price tag for the Intellexa package solution is 8 million euros.
Additionally, a license is offered for 3 million rubles to ensure the persistence of infection in iOS and Android.
In addition, if international targeting is required, Nova International is available for 1.2 million euros, which opens access to 5 additional countries by mutual agreement without geographical restrictions of the target location.
From a technical point of view, the report does not claim to be an exhaustive detailed description of each product, but it is quite informative to get acquainted with and understand the spyware ecosystem.
Nevertheless, specialists and those who are familiar with the topic have not discovered anything new: they are counting on a wide audience and resonance.
Again, the arsenal of US intelligence agencies and ART, which has recently been broadcast by the Chinese infosec, is in reality much more invasive and technological.