
Pegasus: the spyware turning your phone into a surveillance weapon. Endorsed by Edward Snowden and introduced by Rachel Maddow, this investigation reveals how governments worldwide hack critics' devices. What's in your pocket right now could be betraying your every secret.
Laurent Richard and Sandrine Rigaud, award-winning investigative journalists and founders of Forbidden Stories, co-authored Pegasus: How a Spy in Your Pocket Threatens the End of Privacy, Dignity, and Democracy, a groundbreaking exposé on cyber-surveillance.
Richard, known for decades of investigative reporting on corporate and governmental secrecy, and Rigaud, a seasoned editor and documentary filmmaker specializing in global human rights issues, spearheaded the Pegasus Project—a 2021 international collaboration with 80+ journalists that revealed the abuse of NSO Group’s spyware. Their work, which won the European Press Prize and George Polk Award, merges investigative rigor with themes of digital privacy and authoritarian overreach.
Rigaud’s earlier Cartel Project, investigating murdered Mexican journalists, and Richard’s probes into intelligence agencies underscore their commitment to press freedom. Pegasus has been translated into 12 languages, praised by The Guardian as “absorbing…a celebration of journalism,” and shortlisted for the 2024 RSF Impact Prize. The book’s findings sparked global legislative debates on spyware regulation, cementing its status as a critical resource in cybersecurity discourse.
Pegasus exposes the global cyber-surveillance crisis fueled by invasive spyware developed by the NSO Group. The book chronicles a 2021 data leak of 50,000 targeted phone numbers, revealing how governments weaponized Pegasus to spy on journalists, activists, and political leaders. Investigative journalists Laurent Richard and Sandrine Rigaud detail their high-risk efforts to uncover this threat to democracy, privacy, and free speech.
This book is essential for journalists, cybersecurity experts, and activists concerned about digital privacy. It also appeals to readers interested in real-world investigative journalism (e.g., Panama Papers, Wikileaks) or modern spyware’s societal impact. Tech users seeking to understand smartphone vulnerabilities will find actionable insights into surveillance risks.
Yes—Pegasus blends meticulous reporting with thriller-like pacing, offering a sobering look at unchecked surveillance. It’s praised for simplifying complex tech-political issues and highlighting courageous journalism. Readers gain clarity on how spyware threatens democracies and individual freedoms globally.
Pegasus infects smartphones via "zero-click" attacks, granting full access to messages, microphones, and cameras without user interaction. Governments used it to monitor dissidents, as shown in cases like the targeting of French President Emmanuel Macron and murdered journalist Jamal Khashoggi’s associates.
Forbidden Stories—a journalistic network co-founded by Laurent Richard—spearheaded the Pegasus Project, continuing work of threatened reporters. Their collaboration with 17 media outlets exposed how authoritarian regimes exploited the spyware to silence critics.
The book documents assassinations, jailed activists, and suppressed whistleblowers linked to Pegasus. For example, Mexican journalist Cecilio Pineda Birtoa was murdered after his phone was infected, while Rwandan dissidents faced arbitrary detention.
Richard and Rigaud argue that Pegasus-enabled surveillance erodes democracy by targeting journalists, lawyers, and opposition leaders. The book condemns complicit governments and lax regulations allowing private firms like NSO Group to operate without oversight.
The authors question balancing national security with privacy rights, revealing how Pegasus was marketed to combat terrorism but used to suppress dissent. They highlight the moral bankruptcy of selling spyware to regimes with poor human rights records.
Like Laura Poitras’ Citizenfour, Pegasus blends investigative rigor with real-world stakes. It shares Dark Mirror’s focus on tech’s dark side but emphasizes systemic corruption over individual stories.
Some note the dense technical-political details might overwhelm casual readers. Others argue it under-explores solutions to surveillance beyond exposing abuses.
As AI-driven surveillance expands, Pegasus remains a cautionary tale about unregulated tech. Its lessons resonate amid rising authoritarianism and eroded press freedoms globally.
“A weapon sold as a tool for security became a tool of oppression”. Another pivotal line: “When privacy dies, democracy bleeds”—underscoring the stakes of unchecked surveillance.
Senti il libro attraverso la voce dell'autore
Trasforma la conoscenza in spunti coinvolgenti e ricchi di esempi
Cattura le idee chiave in un lampo per un apprendimento veloce
Goditi il libro in modo divertente e coinvolgente
"Stop what you're doing and read this."
"Business is not sport... It's war."
"a worldwide Orwellian nightmare"
"a Trojan horse we sent flying through the air to devices."
"If you're a small company...you don't really think about human rights."
Scomponi le idee chiave di Pegasus in punti facili da capire per comprendere come i team innovativi creano, collaborano e crescono.
Vivi Pegasus attraverso narrazioni vivide che trasformano le lezioni di innovazione in momenti che ricorderai e applicherai.
Chiedi qualsiasi cosa, scegli il tuo stile di apprendimento e co-crea intuizioni che risuonano davvero con te.

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Creato da alumni della Columbia University a San Francisco

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Your smartphone-that intimate extension of your mind containing your most private thoughts-can be weaponized against you without your knowledge. In 2021, the Pegasus Project investigation revealed that NSO Group's military-grade spyware had targeted over 50,000 phones worldwide, including those belonging to journalists, human rights defenders, and even heads of state like Emmanuel Macron. As Edward Snowden remarked: "Stop what you're doing and read this. This leak is going to be the story of the year." This investigation exposed what Rachel Maddow called a "worldwide Orwellian nightmare" and shook the foundations of the unregulated global surveillance industry. Imagine waking up to discover that the device you carry everywhere has been silently betraying your most intimate secrets for months or even years-your location, conversations, photos, and encrypted messages all flowing to unknown watchers.
NSO Group was founded by Israeli entrepreneurs Shalev Hulio and Omri Lavie, who were "serial entrepreneurs" rather than cybersecurity experts. After failed ventures and work at CommuniTake developing remote access software, they established NSO when a European intelligence agency approached them about adapting this technology for surveillance. With $1.6 million in venture capital, they operated from a renovated "chicken coop" outside Tel Aviv. Their timing was strategic - focusing on mobile surveillance when most security researchers still targeted desktop systems. By 2011, they had developed Pegasus, named after the mythological flying horse: "a Trojan horse we sent flying through the air to devices." Mexico became their first major client during President Calderon's battle against drug cartels. Mexico's Secretary of Defense quickly signed a $15 million deal after a demonstration. Though Hulio later claimed NSO always vetted clients for human rights compliance, an insider revealed: "If you're a small company struggling to pay salaries and you have ten million dollars coming from a state in Mexico, you don't really think about human rights."
Once deployed, Pegasus grants operators virtually unlimited access to a target's digital life. The system processes terabytes of intercepted data and infects devices through zero-day exploits - previously unknown software vulnerabilities delivered via personalized text messages with links. The infected phone becomes a perfect spy. Operators can access current and deleted messages, emails, photos, videos, call histories, GPS location, and remotely activate microphones and cameras without detection. The base system monitors 400 phones simultaneously for a year, with expansion options available. Pegasus's brilliance lies in its exploit system. NSO leverages zero-day vulnerabilities unknown to companies like Apple. Modern devices typically require chains of three or more exploits to breach security, each potentially worth millions on the black market. NSO maintained a relentless cat-and-mouse game with Apple. When vulnerabilities were patched, NSO found alternatives within days - a profitable process given their reported $1 million per-target fees. By June 2021, researchers identified the sophisticated zero-click iMessage exploit "Megalodon." NSO cleverly disguised malware by slightly altering legitimate Apple process names (changing "ckkeyrolld" to "ckkeyrollfd"), making it nearly undetectable.
Pegasus surveillance devastated its targets. Moroccan journalist Omar Radi's case shows how technology transformed from liberation tool to instrument of repression. As an activist exposing how public resources enriched the monarchy's allies, Omar became a target. After Forbidden Stories revealed Omar had been targeted with Pegasus, he was arrested for allegedly working with foreign intelligence and rape. Despite his defiance, he received a six-year prison sentence on dubious charges, his health deteriorating in jail. In Azerbaijan, journalist Khadija Ismayilova faced similar persecution after exposing the Aliyev family's corruption. She endured blackmail and imprisonment until Pegasus infiltrated her phone in 2019. When informed about the targeting, she felt overwhelming guilt for everyone she'd inadvertently compromised. Hungarian journalist Szabolcs Panyi discovered his phone had been compromised, giving the government access to everything he saw, spoke, and wrote. Forensic analysis revealed half of his news organization's staff had been targeted. A former Pegasus operator warns: "These tools generate a feeling of supremacy, of power, of control. And its use becomes perverse." This pattern repeated globally - whenever journalists, activists, or opposition figures challenged powerful interests, Pegasus infections appeared in their devices, stalking prey across borders.
The Pegasus Project began when Forbidden Stories journalists and Amnesty International's Security Lab tackled "the List" - fifty thousand phone numbers targeted by NSO Group's spyware requiring verification. Unlike investigations with explicit documents, this required finding spyware evidence on actual phones. The team created a caller ID operation to match numbers to names, starting with Truecaller. They reverse-engineered code and wrote a Python script to crawl the database, using twenty anonymous phones to identify about 1,200 numbers daily. This digital hunt uncovered significant targets, including members of French President Macron's government and Turkish President Erdogan's son. As media partners joined, the operation expanded to verification through multiple sources and analysis of targeting patterns. In one breakthrough, researchers discovered Pegasus actively infecting Carine Kanimba's phone (daughter of "Hotel Rwanda" hero Paul Rusesabagina) during examination, providing insight into Pegasus operations and helping develop better detection methods. By July 18, 2021, the Pegasus Project launched across seventeen media outlets in ten countries, documenting global surveillance abuse targeting journalists, politicians, activists, and business leaders across continents.
The publication triggered global shockwaves. NSO initially claimed they "care about journalists and activists" while citing Israeli regulation, but as stories gained traction, their response grew angrier until they declared "Enough is enough" and refused further media inquiries. Official confirmations quickly emerged. France's National Cybersecurity Agency verified findings about targeted journalists and identified additional victims including five government ministers. Other revelations followed: Dubai's emir using Pegasus against his estranged wife, Israel targeting Palestinian activists, and Mexico arresting someone who targeted journalist Carmen Aristegui. Apple responded by patching the Megalodon exploit, developing a Lockdown Mode, and suing NSO as "amoral 21st century mercenaries." The US government blacklisted NSO, cutting them off from American technology suppliers. By November 2021, NSO faced existential threats. Their incoming CEO fled before his official start date, their majority owner had collapsed, and even the Oregon state pension fund questioned its investment. Despite desperate attempts including a proposed "phoenix plan" to offload liabilities, NSO's future looked bleak.
While NSO's decline serves as a cautionary tale, the fundamental problems remain unsolved. Despite numerous government hearings following the Pegasus Project, there has been plenty of "lip-flapping" but little actual regulation. The cybersurveillance industry continues operating without real guardrails. Other companies have rushed to fill the void. The UAE created DarkMatter, hiring NSO's top talent with seven-figure salaries. Similar operations have emerged in countries with advanced tech sectors but limited oversight. Most concerning is that governments who abused Pegasus have faced virtually no consequences. Our phones contain our most intimate thoughts and data, yet Pegasus-style technology can breach this privacy for anyone who attracts powerful attention. Without decisive action, the surveillance technology arms race threatens to reshape the citizen-state relationship. The Pegasus Project revealed how our smartphone can become our most dangerous betrayer.