Amnesty International calls for the Serbian government to end these surveillance practices: Serbian authorities must stop ...
The post Android spyware “NoviSpy” found installed on a journalist’s phone appeared first on Android Headlines.
Amnesty’s analysis of the NoviSpy spyware and a series of operational security, or OPSEC, mistakes point to Serbian intelligence as the spyware’s developer. According to Amnesty’s report ...
The Serbian government exploited Qualcomm zero-days to unlock and infect Android devices with a new spyware named 'NoviSpy,' used to spy on activists, journalists, and protestors. One of the ...
The report uncovered the use of NoviSpy, a previously unknown bespoke Android spyware tool. The Serbian police and the Security Information Agency (Bezbedonosno-informativna Agencija – BIA) have been ...
Serbian authorities have rejected the claims they used forensic tools from Israeli company Cellebrite and bespoke spyware for illegal surveillance, calling them "nonsensical". #EuropeNews ...
It also found spyware that Amnesty said was previously unknown to it – a programme called NoviSpy – which had been installed on Milanov’s phone. Milanov said he was never advised that the ...
The Serbian spyware, dubbed “NoviSpy” by Amnesty, then took covert screenshots of mobile devices, copied contacts, and uploaded them to a government-controlled server, the report said.
Amnesty’s analysis of the NoviSpy spyware and a series of operational security, or OPSEC, mistakes point to Serbian intelligence as the spyware’s developer. According to Amnesty’s report ...
This is what happened to Serbian journalist Slaviša Milanov, who later discovered an undocumented Android spyware called “NoviSpy” installed on his phone. According to Amnesty International ...
After a forensic scan it found that Cellebrite had been used to unlock the device and NoviSpy spyware had been installed. "We don't actually have agencies focused on the safety of citizens ...
The Serbian spyware, dubbed “NoviSpy” by Amnesty, then took covert screenshots of mobile devices, copied contacts, and uploaded them to a government-controlled server, the report said.