Pegasus is a military-grade spyware that can copy your messages, harvest your photos and even record you by controlling your phone’s own camera and microphone. It was developed to fight crime, and the company that makes it says it only sells to governments for tracking and capturing criminals and terrorists.
But some governments are using Pegasus another way. Around the globe, journalists, human rights activists, scholars and others are facing digital attacks. In this episode, Reveal partners with the Shoot the Messenger podcast to investigate one of the biggest Pegasus hacks ever uncovered – the targeting of the El Faro newspaper in El Salvador.
El Faro has been lauded for its investigations into government corruption and gang violence. The newspaper is no stranger to threats and intimidation, which have increased under the administration of President Nayib Bukele.
Over the course of one year, 22 members of the newspaper’s staff had their phones infected with Pegasus and were surveilled by a remote operator. Researchers suspect the government was behind the spying, though it has denied those allegations. The breach forced El Faro’s journalists to change the way they work and live – and to take extreme measures to protect sources and themselves.
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