The Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto uncovered evidence that Russian authorities used a Cellebrite UFED device to extract data from the iPhone of Andrey Pivovarov, a prominent opposition figure, in June 2021. This occurred three months after the company announced it would immediately stop providing hardware and software to Russian government agencies. Court documents from Pivovarov’s subsequent prosecution confirmed the use of these tools to scan his private messages for political keywords.
While Cellebrite’s chief marketing officer, David Gee, stated that the company terminated all Russian contracts and licenses in March 2021, the incident underscores a fundamental flaw in the surveillance industry: the inability to effectively recall powerful digital weaponry once deployed. Eitay Mack, a human rights lawyer, noted that simply halting sales does not neutralize the hardware already in government hands. Researchers suggest that without features like remote-bricking or cryptographically signed watermarks, companies cannot ensure their tools are not repurposed for political repression long after they have officially washed their hands of a client.

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