and had all the hallmarks of a"private company working with governments on surveillance".
It said it was"deeply concerned about the abuse" of surveillance technology, and it believed human rights activists may have been the targets of the breach. "We're working with human rights groups on learning as much as we can about who may have been impacted from their community. That's really where our highest concern is," a spokesman said.
Ireland's Data Protection Commission, the lead regulator of WhatsApp in the European Union, said in a statement the vulnerability"may have enabled a malicious actor to install unauthorised software and gain access to personal data on devices which have WhatsApp installed".Scott Storey, a senior lecturer in cyber security at Sheffield Hallam University, said the attack appeared to be carried out by governments targeting specific people, mainly human rights campaigners.
"For the average end user, it's not something to really worry about," he said, adding WhatsApp quickly fixed the vulnerability.Earlier, the Financial Times reported
And this is the 'secure' application that Mal Bullturd promoted. The man throws eggs at himself.
HAHAHA! And it is NOT by Huawei and NOT by China! What have the nutters got to say?
Things like this are bound to happen when you have an Assistance and Access Bill 2018. It was only a matter of time.
...who cares; the social domain is the governmental domain, is the hackers' domain, is the pirates domain, is the domain absent of any expected level of privacy; if you don't already know this then your head is well and truly in the sand...Sanitynow
Should I delete the app
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Break up Facebook, says company's co-founderChris Hughes, one of the co-founders of Facebook, has called for the social media behemoth to be broken up, warning that Mark Zuckerberg had become far too powerful. The man is so insensitive and aloof - he appears inhuman
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