August 20, 2020
Israeli spyware company NSO Group can't press pause on a suit accusing it of hacking WhatsApp users' phones just because it decided to appeal its failed motion to dismiss, Facebook told the California federal judge overseeing the case.
July 24, 2020
From two cases that could define the scope of a hotly debated computer crimes law to a U.S. Supreme Court dispute set to rattle the landscape of federal robocall and text message litigation, the second half of 2020 should be busy in the world of cybersecurity and privacy law. Here are five cases worth watching.
July 17, 2020
A California federal court has declined to dismiss allegations that Israeli spyware company NSO hacked WhatsApp's users' phones, signing off on what legal observers had called a novel theory of liability under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act.
June 25, 2020
NSO Group has urged a California federal judge to deny Facebook-owned WhatsApp's bid to permanently bar the Israeli spyware company from using or "interfering" with the social media platforms, as the messaging app accuses NSO Group of hacking its users.
June 17, 2020
A California federal court has denied WhatsApp's bid to block King & Spalding LLP from defending spyware company NSO Group from allegations of hacking WhatsApp users' phones, finding that the BigLaw giant's prior work for WhatsApp is not a conflict of interest.
June 01, 2020
King & Spalding LLP fired back at WhatsApp's "drastic" bid to disqualify the law firm from representing an Israeli spyware company that the messaging app has accused of hacking its users' phones, arguing that FBI Director Christopher Wray and two others who previously advised WhatsApp departed the firm "long before" the suit was filed last year.
April 30, 2020
Christopher Wray, who as head of the FBI has called end-to-end encrypted communications a boon to child predators, defended Facebook-owned WhatsApp's use of the technology while in private practice at BigLaw giant King & Spalding LLP, newly unsealed court papers say.