Bill Marczak, who has been tracking the spread of spyware around the globe, on the campus of the University of California, Berkeley, May 19, 2016. It signals a serious escalation in the cybersecurity arms race, with governments willing to pay whatever it takes to spy on digital communications en masse, and with tech companies, human rights activists and others racing to uncover and fix the latest vulnerabilities that enable such surveillance. The discovery means that more than 1.65 billion Apple products in use worldwide have been vulnerable to NSO’s spyware since at least March. Also read | Project Pegasus: Experts fear Apple-Android duopoly making life easier for spyware, a losing battle for users
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