One of the most elusive spyware and malware providers to government agencies has been hit by hackers who have turned over what appears to be most of, if not all of the company’s corporate data.
After apparently taking over its Twitter account, the administrative innards of the Milan, Italy-based Hacking Team was left open for the world to download.
Throughout Sunday evening, a series of further tweets pointed to a widespread attack of the company’s systems, exposing some of its — and the world’s government’s dealings — open for public scrutiny.
Hackers, whose identities are not yet known, have posted a torrent file-sharing link of more than 400GB worth of the company’s data — including emails and financial data — for download.
The Italian company makes surveillance technology for governments and private industry, although names and companies have never been formally disclosed.
The company which makes spyware and malware designed to infiltrate a number of platforms, both desktop and mobile, to assist in surveillance. Its products can turn over instant messages and text messages, phone calls, and other data, all while slipping past most antivirus products.
But exactly who gets those tools remained much of a mystery.
In some of the documents seen, the company has provided sales to countries with poor records on human rights and civil liberties, such as Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Oman, Lebanon, and Egypt.
The company previously said it had not sold spyware and targeted surveillance malware to Sudan, but records leaked from the company’s systems suggest otherwise.
In one file first tweeted about, the company instructed the Sudanese government to pay €480,000 ($530,000) by wire transfer for “remote control” systems, used to access a subject’s personal information.
That has caused headaches at the highest level in global government, some suggest.
One document suggested the company had been “stonewalling” a one-year investigation by the United Nations into the company’s sales with member state governments, according to Christopher Soghoian, principle technologist at the American Civil Liberties Union.
Our software isn’t a weapon, so we weren’t prohibited from selling it to Sudan,
he said in a tweet, paraphrasing a document he screenshotted and published.
Hacking Team was in 2012 named as one of the “corporate enemies of the internet” by Reporters Without Borders for its role in providing tools to oppressive nations.