Why is it in the news?
- The Washington Post and Amnesty International report revealed the targeting of journalists in India by Pegasus spyware.
- The spyware utilized a ‘zero-click exploit,’ enabling installation without the device owner’s consent or action.
About Pegasus Spyware
- Developed, marketed, and licensed by the Israeli company NSO Group.
- Marketed as a tool for targeted spying, not mass surveillance.
- Capable of infecting billions of phones running iOS or Android.
- Operates in countries with human rights abuses, including Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Madagascar, and Oman.
Indian Scenario
- Despite no public acknowledgment, Pegasus found on phones of journalists, academics, and opposition leaders, leading to a political crisis.
- Capable of turning phones into surveillance devices, intercepting encrypted messages from platforms like WhatsApp and Signal.
- Recently, the activists filed petitions alleging government mass surveillance through Pegasus. Further, the Supreme Court asked the Centre for a detailed affidavit, but the Centre refused, citing national security concerns.
Relevant Indian Laws
- Indian Telegraph Act, 1885: Section 5(2) allows interception in the interests of sovereignty, integrity, security, friendly relations, or public order.
- Rule 419A (added in 2007) outlines operational procedures for interception, following the PUCL vs Union of India case.
- S. Puttaswamy vs Union of India (2017): Stressed the need for oversight, legality, proportionality, and procedures in surveillance.
- Information Technology Act, 2000: Section 69 allows electronic surveillance in the interest of sovereignty, integrity, defence, security, friendly relations, public order, or crime prevention.
Suggested Measures
- Emphasize the need for transparency and openness in government actions.
- Advocates reforms for professionalizing intelligence gathering, parliamentary oversight of intelligence agencies, non-partisanship, and protection of civil liberties and the rule of law.