Online event
- Wednesday, 03. May 2023 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm Save in my calendar
Wiretapped: Combatting the Use of Spyware and Surveillance Against Journalists
Almost two years ago in July 2021, Forbidden Stories, a network of journalists led by investigative reporters Sandrine Rigaud and Laurent Richard together with Amnesty International, uncovered the largest surveillance scandal in recent history. With the help of a new kind of spyware called "Pegasus", manufactured and distributed by the Israeli NSO Group, phones of victims could be spied on, location data could be retrieved, messages read, and conversations intercepted. The software operated silently in the background without the victims noticing their phones were wiretapped. By then, "Pegasus" had been sold in more than 20 countries, including autocratic regimes but also EU Member States. Over 50,000 potential victims were identified. Among them journalists, human rights activists, and government critics who became targets of their own governments. This unprecedented attack on privacy and on freedom of the press generated outrage around the world.
Since then, we have seen wiretapping scandals involving spyware in Hungary, Poland, Greece, and Spain, in which journalists and politicians were targeted. In our digital age, spyware has thus become a new and unique weapon against critical voices and a serious threat to rule of law and basic democratic rights.
On World Press Freedom Day, we therefore want to discuss the threat spyware poses to our democracy and reflect on what the revelations by Forbidden Stories have achieved to date: Where do we stand almost two years later, with the use of spyware seemingly all the more ubiquitous? How can journalists and human rights activists protect themselves against these wiretapping techniques? Can a moratorium on – or a regulation of – spyware sales be enforced? What should we expect from the final report of the European Parliament’s PEGA Committee of Inquiry, which is due to be presented soon? Moreover, what sanctions mechanisms should be put in place against European governments that spy on their own citizens?
With:
- Laurent Richard, Founder and CEO, Forbidden Stories, Paris
- Hannah Neumann, MEP, peace and human rights spokesperson of the Greens/EFA Group, Member of the Pegasus Inquiry Committee (PEGA), Brussels
- Tasos Telloglou, Investigative Journalist, Athens
- Host: Jan Philipp Albrecht, President, Heinrich Böll Foundation, Berlin
Technical details:
The event will be held in English and German via Zoom with simultaneous interpretation. The event will also be livestreamed without interpretation. Please register and attend the event via Zoom to access simultaneous interpretation.
Online participation via ZOOM
The access information will be sent to you by email 24 hours and then 2 hours prior to the event.
You can use either the Zoom Client software or the app. If you are using either the Chrome or Edge browsers you will be able to participate directly via the access link. For more information on how to use Zoom, click here.
Please make sure that you are using the latest version of Zoom so that you have the necessary settings. You will need a microphone and possibly a camera for events with audience participation.
The Heinrich Böll Foundation is not liable for issues arising from the use of Zoom software. Zoom's current privacy policy can be found here.
Contact:
Claudia Rothe
E-Mail: rothe@boell.de
- Timezone
- CEST
- Address
-
➽ Online Event
- Language
- German
- English