Tuesday, June 07, 2022

ISRAELI SPYWARE GROUP NSO: Back in the News

Intro:

News|Cybersecurity

Top US court seeks Biden input on lawsuit against Israel’s NSO

Supreme Court asks Justice Department to say whether spyware firm is immune from WhatsApp lawsuit over alleged hacking.

NSO group

The administration of US President Joe Biden imposed sanctions on NSO Group last year

[File: Sebastian Scheiner/AP Photo]

"The United States Supreme Court wants the administration of President Joe Biden to weigh in on whether NSO Group has sovereign immunity from civil litigation in US courts to assess whether a lawsuit by WhatsApp against the Israeli spyware company can proceed.

NSO Group’s lawyers had argued that because the company’s product is used by foreign governments and law enforcement agencies, the firm is protected from civil lawsuits on US soil.

Last November, a US Court of Appeals dismissed NSO Group’s push to assert legal immunity, but on Monday the top US court asked the US Department of Justice to “file a brief in this case expressing the views of the United States”.

Amnesty, research groups map out global reach of Israeli NSO Group's  spyware | The Times of Israel

WhatsApp – owned by Meta Platforms (formerly Facebook) – is suing NSO Group over the alleged targeting of its servers in California with malware to gain unauthorised access to approximately 1,400 mobile devices in violation of US state and federal law.

The Israeli firm has sparked outrage from rights groups after a 2021 investigation by international media outlets revealed its Pegasus spyware was used by security forces and authoritarian governments in several countries.

Last year, the San Francisco-based Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a lower court’s decision to allow WhatsApp’s lawsuit to proceed, stressing that NSO Group does not qualify for sovereign immunity even if its clients are foreign government agencies.

“NSO claims that it should enjoy the immunity extended to sovereigns because it provides technology used for law-enforcement purposes and law enforcement is an inherently sovereign function,” Judge Danielle Forrest, who was appointed by ex-President Donald Trump, wrote in the ruling.

“Whatever NSO’s government customers do with its technology and services does not render NSO an ‘agency or instrumentality of a foreign state,’ as Congress has defined that term. Thus, NSO is not entitled to the protection of foreign sovereign immunity.”

NSO Group appealed the ruling to the Supreme Court. In a May filing to the top court, the firm’s lawyers called the appeals judges’ decision “dangerously wrong”.

“Precluding private entities from seeking common-law conduct-based immunity will not merely hinder foreign governments from contracting with private entities,” NSO Group’s lawyers wrote.

“It also will impede the United States’ ability to protect its national security, because the government relies heavily on private contractors to provide the technology and expertise necessary to defend the nation against foreign and domestic threats.”

In the original legal complaint, WhatsApp accused the Israeli firm of breaching its terms of service and undermining the messaging platform’s “reputation, public trust and goodwill” with hacking activities.

Last year, the Biden administration sanctioned NSO Group – adding it to the “Entity List” of companies considered to be engaged in activities contrary to US foreign policy and national security – after accusing it of enabling “transnational repression” with its spyware.

WhatsApp’s lawyers cited the sanctions in a filing to the Supreme Court earlier this year, urging the justices to disregard the Israeli firm’s request for reviewing the lower court’s decision.

“The United States has determined that NSO’s spyware activities — the very type of activities for which NSO seeks immunity — are contrary to US national-security and foreign-policy interests, and has therefore added NSO to its Entity List restricting the export, reexport, and transfer of covered entities’ items,” WhatsApp’s lawyers wrote.

“Even if private entities were eligible for common-law foreign sovereign immunity (they are not), a company on the Entity List would have no plausible claim to such immunity.”

NSO Group has regularly denied allegations of enabling human rights abuses, saying that its spyware, which is licenced by the Israeli government, is meant to track criminals and “terrorists”.

[     ]

Source: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2022/6/6/top-us-court-seeks-biden-input-on-lawsuit-against-israels-nso 

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RELATED CONTENT ON THIS BLOG GOING BACK TO 2017
PEGASUS SPYWARE / Cyber Espionage Tool > The Ultimate Spyware
An Opinion Piece in the New York Times caught your MesaZona blogger's eye today.
What Poses a Greater Privacy Threat Than Facebook? Spyware
WhatsApp’s lawsuit against the spyware company NSO Group is a smart move for Facebook and an important defense of privacy and civil liberties.
A lawsuit that is a genuine step forward for drawing attention to the spyware market and the need for stricter regulation of private surveillance companies like NSO.
Pegasus is a spyware that can be installed on devices running certain versions of iOS, Apple's mobile operating system, developed by the Israeli cyberarms firm, NSO Group
"Facebook is under fierce scrutiny for its decisions about political advertisements and consumer privacy, and its foray into developing a new cryptocurrency. So it makes sense that the company would try to drum up a little positive publicity and remind people that there are tech firms out there that pose much greater threats to privacy, democracy and civil liberties.
 
As for surveillance, let’s be clear:
We’re talking total surveillance
"Whatever you may think of Facebook, the Israeli spyware company known as the NSO Group — whose products have been used to compromise devices belonging to lawyers, dissidents, journalists and diplomats around the world — is inarguably worse. . ."

Monday, June 06, 2022

SELECTED NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Mesa, AZ...FinePrint Details from Fitch Rates Mesa Rating Action Commentary

From Google Search today

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Rating Action Commentary

Fitch Rates Mesa, AZ $22.4 Million GO Bonds 'AAA', Affirms 'AA' IDR; Outlook Stable

Tue 10 May, 2022 - ‎12‎:‎26 ET

CREDIT PROFILE

By several measures Mesa has been solidly growing in recent years. Population is estimated to be up 15% since 2010, and taxable values have registered strong increases. Fiscal 2022 limited primary value (LPV) is $3.99 billion, up nearly 7% from fiscal 2021. Annual LPV gains averaged better than 6% over the prior five fiscal years.

Major employers in Mesa include Boeing, Banner Health Systems, Wal-Mart and Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport. Staff reports more than four million square feet of new commercial space was added throughout the city in 2021, exceeding an earlier projection of three million square feet. Gulfstream Aerospace recently announced plans for a 225,000 square-foot maintenance and repair facility at the airport.

The city's Elliot Road Technology Corridor features Apple's 1.3 million square-foot data center. Also, Meta has announced plans for an $800 million, 960,000 square-foot data center and Google has committed to a $1 billion, 750,000 square-foot data campus. ASU at Mesa City Center is a $75 million joint project between Arizona State University and the city that when completed (fall, 2022) will feature programs in sensory technology, gaming, experiential design and media arts. Bell Bank Park is a 320-acre sports and entertainment complex that opened in January 2022; the complex is projected to add 1,500 jobs and boost Mesa's annual visitor totals.

Revenue Framework

The largest components of general fund revenues are state-shared income and sales tax and vehicle registration fee revenues (43% of fiscal 2021 total) and local sales taxes (39%). Licenses and permits was the third largest category in fiscal 2021, generating 9% of total revenue.

The 10-year general fund revenue CAGR (fiscal 2011-2021) was slightly more than 4%, generally in line with U.S. GDP growth over the same period. Fitch expects a solid post-pandemic revenue growth rate given ongoing and planned economic activity in Mesa.

Arizona cities can increase the property tax levy for operations by 2% from the prior year, plus taxes on any new construction. Mesa currently does not levy a property tax for operations. In addition, any increase in the local sales tax rate must be approved by voters. These constraints impose significant restrictions on the city's revenue-raising ability.

Expenditure Framework

As is the case with most municipalities, public safety represents Mesa's largest governmental cost of service, accounting for 56% of fiscal 2021 operating costs. Other major spending categories include general government (25%) and culture and recreation (9%).

The city's natural pace of spending is expected to track closely with revenue growth, as service demands from a growing population will maintain a certain amount of pressure on the city's resources.

Mesa achieves expenditure flexibility through discretion over headcount, salaries and work rules with its three employee groups. While the city's carrying costs are moderately elevated at 20% of fiscal 2021 spending, the assessment considers the workforce flexibility and a rapid pace of debt retirement (more than 75% in 10 years). The fiscal 2022 budget included an additional contribution amount to the state sponsored public safety pension program (above the actuarially determined amount). Management reports this additional contribution, which will continue for the next several years, is aimed at reducing the net pension liability and smoothing out annual contribution amounts for the duration of the projected 21-year amortization period.

Long-Term Liability Burden

Mesa's long-term liability burden of just below 10% of personal income is relatively low but likely poised to climb higher as growth-related capital needs continue. The series 2022 bond issue includes various municipal improvement projects authorized by voters in 2018 and 2020. The $100 million bond proposition approved in November, 2020 provides funding for various transportation projects in the city, and staff expects annual tax-supported borrowings in the $30 million to $40 million range for the near term. In addition, the city's annual budget typically includes funding for various pay/go capital projects.

The city participates in three pension plans. These are

-- the Arizona State Retirement System (ASRS), a cost-sharing multiple-employer defined benefit plan for non-uniformed employees and two state-sponsored agent multiple-employer defined benefit plans:

-- the PSPRS Police and

-- PSPRS Fire plans.

Under GASB 67 and 68, the city reported an aggregate fiscal 2021 net pension liability (NPL) of roughly $1 billion, with fiduciary assets covering 54% of total pension liabilities. Adjusting for Fitch's lower standard 6% investment rate assumption, the aggregate NPL for the city's plans totals about $1.4 billion with fiduciary assets covering only 46% of total estimated pension liabilities.

Operating Performance

The Fitch Analytical Stress Test (FAST) scenario analysis tool relates historical tax revenue volatility to GDP to support the assessment of operating performance under Fitch's criteria. FAST is not a forecast, but it represents Fitch's estimate of possible revenue behavior in a downturn, based on historical revenue performance. Hence, actual revenue will vary from FAST results. FAST does provide a relative sense of the risk exposure of a particular local government compared to other U.S. local governments.

FAST results indicate an elevated amount of pressure on the city's financial resilience in a downturn, absent policy interventions. However, the city's revenue volatility is likely overstated due to a sizable shift of revenue out of the general fund in fiscal 2011 and fiscal 2012. The combined amount totaled roughly $63 million or 20% of fiscal 2010 general fund revenues.

Recent positive financial performance has boosted general fund reserves materially, contributing to Fitch's assessment that the city retains the highest gap-closing capacity and can address economic pressures and navigate future business cycles while maintaining a high degree of financial flexibility.

Fiscal 2021 general fund results included a sizable $94 million net surplus after transfers and an unrestricted year-end balance of more than $285 million or 66% of spending and transfers out. Better than expected revenue performance (due partly to federal stimulus initiatives) and solid expenditure control during the fiscal year both contributed to the positive results. Operating sales tax receipts totaled $152.6 million, up a sharp 15% from the prior year.

The fiscal 2022 (FYE June 30) general fund budget included a spending increase of roughly 9% from the adopted fiscal 2021 budget. The spending total included $49 million for pay/go capital spending and also included step pay increases of 3% for all employees. Operating sales tax revenues were originally budgeted at $137.6 million or about 12% above the amount budgeted the prior year; fiscal year-end totals currently are expected to exceed budget.

The budget anticipates a moderate drawdown of general fund reserves by year-end, with fund balance expected to comfortably exceed the city's 10% of spending policy minimum. Total budgeted staff positions of 4,240 represented a 2.5% increase from the fiscal 2021 budget.

The city reports pandemic-related financial assistance to date of roughly $240 million, including $90 million in CARES Act proceeds and a $105 million American Rescue Plan Act allocation. Application of the assistance has included a variety of community support initiatives, including health and safety measures, small business support, food and education assistance and premium pay for essential workers.

The city maintains a policy whereby annual utility transfers--in the form of PILOTs--support general fund operations; the policy allows for a maximum transfer of 30% of gross utility system revenues. The fiscal 2022 budgeted PILOT amount totaled $114 million or more than 20% of recurring general fund revenues and total transfers.

In addition to the sources of information identified in Fitch's applicable criteria specified below, this action was informed by information from Lumesis.

REFERENCES FOR SUBSTANTIALLY MATERIAL SOURCE CITED AS KEY DRIVER OF RATING

The principal sources of information used in the analysis are described in the Applicable Criteria.

ESG Considerations

Unless otherwise disclosed in this section, the highest level of ESG credit relevance is a score of '3'. This means ESG issues are credit-neutral or have only a minimal credit impact on the entity, either due to their nature or the way in which they are being managed by the entity. For more information on Fitch's ESG Relevance Scores, visit www.fitchratings.com/esg.

RATING ACTIONS
Entity / Debt  
Rating  
Prior  
Mesa (AZ) [General Government]
LT IDR
AA 
Affirmed
AA 
  • Mesa (AZ) /General Obligation - Unlimited Tax/1 LT
LT
AAA 
Affirmed
AAA 
  • Mesa (AZ) /Issuer Default Rating - General Government/1 LT
LT
AA 
Affirmed
AA 
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Additional information is available on www.fitchratings.com

PARTICIPATION STATUS

The rated entity (and/or its agents) or, in the case of structured finance, one or more of the transaction parties participated in the rating process except that the following issuer(s), if any, did not participate in the rating process, or provide additional information, beyond the issuer’s available public disclosure.

APPLICABLE MODELS

Numbers in parentheses accompanying applicable model(s) contain hyperlinks to criteria providing description of model(s).

  • FAST Econometric API - Fitch Analytical Stress Test Model, v3.0.0 (1)

ADDITIONAL DISCLOSURES

ENDORSEMENT STATUS

Mesa (AZ) EU Endorsed, UK Endorsed

DISCLAIMER & DISCLOSURES

All Fitch Ratings (Fitch) credit ratings are subject to certain limitations and disclaimers. Please read these limitations and disclaimers by following this link: https://www.fitchratings.com/understandingcreditratings. In addition, the following

Solicitation Status

The ratings above were solicited and assigned or maintained by Fitch at the request of the rated entity/issuer or a related third party. Any exceptions follow below.

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AeroSpace & Defense News

Today: Against the background of changes in the security situation, many NATO and NATO partner countries have an increasing need for modern ammunition

Rheinmetall Supplies 35mm Ammunition to NATO Customers

contract value around EUR20 million

Rheinmetall has been contracted by several NATO customers to supply 35mm calibre ammunition. Deliveries will take place in 2023 and 2024 and the contract is worth a total of around €20 million. Between 2023 and 2024, Rheinmetall will supply the customer countries with various types of ammunition in 35mm x 228 calibre for infantry fighting vehicles. Rheinmetall works continuously with the user nations to further develop the combat capability of the system.

Against the background of changes in the security situation, many NATO and NATO partner countries have an increasing need for modern ammunition. Rheinmetall offers its customers an extensive portfolio in this regard and is adapting to the higher demand.

Rheinmetall provides a comprehensive medium-calibre ammunition portfolio for its own and other cannons. The portfolio covers a broad range of mission profiles and targets and allows minimizing the number of required ammunition types balancing performance with logistics.

Global Military Ammunition - Market and Technology Forecast to 2027

Global Military Ammunition - Market and Technology Forecast to 2027

Market forecasts by Regions, by Caliber, and by End-User. Country analysis, Market/Technologies Overview, Opportunities, and Leading Companies

Published: April 2019 - Pages: 264 pages

Download free sample pages

The ammunition combines a high penetration performance, versatility, reliability, low dispersion and handling safety. Corresponding target practice and drill rounds complete the portfolio.

Source: Rheinmetall AG
Date: Jun 2, 2022
View original News release

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Rheinmetall Wins Multi-year Service Contract from an International Customer

  • Services in the Higher Double-digit Million Euro Range

Rheinmetall has received a significant service contract from an international customer. The contract is set to run for five years and is worth a high double-digit million euro amount.

Between 2022 and 2027, Rheinmetall will supply the customer with spare parts for its air defence systems in use, carry out repairs and provide maintenance support. This contract continues a business relationship that has been successful for decades.

As an international systems supplier, Rheinmetall not only has extensive expertise in the development and manufacture of modern products and systems. The company can also support and modernise them throughout their entire service life. In doing so, Rheinmetall can integrate the armed forces and industry of the customer countries in order to contribute to the preservation of key national capabilities.

Non-dispersive Infrared (NDIR) Market - Global Forecast to 2027

Non-dispersive Infrared (NDIR) Market - Global Forecast to 2027

by Gas Type (Carbon dioxide, hydrocarbons,others), Application (Monitoring, HVAC, Detection and Analysis), Vertical (Industrial & Manufacturing, Oil & Gas) and Region

Download free sample pages

Source: Rheinmetall AG
Date: Jun 3, 2022
View original News release

Today's News Headlines.....................................................................................

 
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ARIZONA GOVERNOR DOUG DUCEY DOUBLE-DOWNS ON HIS ISRAEL TRADE MISSION...translated from Globes, an Israeli financial newspaper,

Retrieved “The Consulate General of Israel in Los Angeles was delighted to work with the governor and his team on realizing this visit of the governor, the third visit by the governor in Israel.” 
The story about Arizona from Globes, an Israeli financial newspaper, is below. (Don’t worry, we’ve translated it for you.) Also below are excerpts from other articles about the governor’s whirlwind trip from Arizonan and Israeli media, as well as social media.

Silicon Valley is out. Silicon Desert is in.

 

This week, Arizona Governor Doug Ducey visited Israel, one of Israel's biggest friends among the governors and, no less important, the state governor, whose trade with Israel is the third largest after California and New York.

In a conversation with Globes, he explains that his goal is to attract Israeli high-tech companies, entrepreneurs, start-ups and investors to his country. "We have all the conditions for Israeli companies and start-ups to grow with us," says Ducey. The corporate income tax in Arizona stands at 4.9 percent, compared to 7.25 percent in New York and 8.84 percent in California. At the same time, Arizona (non-federal) income tax for residents is 2.5 percent, compared to 10.9 percent in New York and 13.3 percent in California. The volume of trade between Israel and Arizona in 2021 reached about $680 million, and accounted for 1.3 percent of all of Israel's foreign trade. 

Due in part to the high taxation and cost of living in California and New York, states like Arizona provide a replacement for tech companies looking to find a convenient location for their bases. Ducey mentions that his country is the only one that operates a trade and investment office in Israel, and says that during his visit he focuses on companies that deal with technology related to desert agriculture, salt water desalination, efficient use of irrigation, and solar energy. 

Another aspect that the Arizona governor dealt with during his visit to Israel is border control. Arizona, like all border countries with Mexico, suffers from illegal immigration from Latin American countries.

 

Zelensky Calls for a European Army as He Slams EU Leaders’ Response

      Jan 23, 2026 During the EU Summit yesterday, the EU leaders ...