Bill takes aim at American buyers of foreign espionage software

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WASHINGTON • American spymasters would be able to yank business away from United States companies that purchase or market foreign espionage software, under a Bill the House Intelligence Committee advanced.
The Bill must be approved by the full House and reconciled with its Senate counterpart before it becomes law. It follows media reports that Israeli spyware maker NSO was in talks to be acquired by US defence contractor L3Harris Technologies.
NSO and L3Harris did not immediately return messages seeking comment.
Calling the proliferation of foreign-made commercial spyware "an acute and emergent threat to the national security of the United States", the Bill advanced on Wednesday would empower the US Director of National Intelligence to bar any contract between such spyware manufacturers and the intelligence community.
It would also authorise the White House to sanction them if they target US spies.
In a statement, the White House said it shared lawmakers' concerns that tools made by the likes of NSO posed "a serious counterintelligence and security risk to US personnel and systems" and was working on its own ban on the government's use of foreign spyware that had been misused abroad.
Another clause would allow the director to prohibit any part of the intelligence community from contracting with a US company that had acquired foreign commercial spyware "in whole or in part".
That stipulation could have been fatal to the reported L3Harris deal.
The threat posed by foreign-made spyware to US national security has crept up the political agenda recently.
Last year, Reuters revealed that State Department phones had been hacked using NSO spyware. Only a few weeks earlier, NSO was blacklisted by the US Department of Commerce.
Ms Lauren French, a spokesman for the House Intelligence Committee, said the panel had scheduled a rare unclassified hearing on foreign espionage tools for next Wednesday.
REUTERS
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