TechCrunch News 07月22日 06:41
Serial spyware founder Scott Zuckerman wants the FTC to unban him from the surveillance industry
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曾因数据泄露被禁止从事监控行业的SpyFone创始人Scott Zuckerman,正试图撤销美国联邦贸易委员会(FTC)于2021年对其施加的禁令。该禁令源于其公司SpyFone在2018年泄露了数千人的私人电话数据。Zuckerman声称禁令带来了“不必要的负担”,限制了他拓展其他业务。此举引发隐私倡导者和行业批评者的密切关注,因为若禁令被修改或撤销,将允许有数据泄露前科的监控供应商再次不受限制地运营。尽管已有禁令,Zuckerman被发现仍在参与其他窃听软件项目,并且通过名为SpyTrac的应用试图规避FTC的禁令,该应用的数据也包含了SpyFone的记录。安全专家对此表示强烈反对,认为Zuckerman屡次证明自己是“不良行为者”,在禁令生效后仍继续运营其“跟踪软件”公司。

📊 禁令背景与初衷:Scott Zuckerman曾因其公司SpyFone泄露大量用户私人电话数据,包括照片、信息和位置数据,于2021年被FTC及其下属公司Support King及其子公司施加了行业禁令,并要求其业务接受严格的网络安全实践和频繁审计,以防止再次发生类似的数据泄露事件。

⚖️ 创始人申诉理由:Zuckerman现提出申诉,要求撤销或修改FTC的禁令,理由是该禁令对其施加了“不必要的负担”,高昂的合规成本阻碍了他拓展其他业务的发展。他试图通过此举来减轻经营压力,并强调新任FTC领导层更关注“确保法规对消费者和公众产生积极影响”的执法理念。

🚫 规避行为与持续风险:尽管面临FTC的禁令,Zuckerman仍被发现参与了SpyTrac等窃听软件项目,并被指控试图通过这些项目规避FTC的监管。SpyTrac的数据泄露记录中甚至包含SpyFone的违规数据,这表明Zuckerman在禁令生效后并未完全停止其违规行为,继续对用户隐私构成潜在威胁。

📢 社区担忧与反对:包括电子前沿基金会(EFF)在内的安全社区强烈反对Zuckerman的申诉。EFF网络安全主管Eva Galperin指出,Zuckerman反复证明自己是“不良行为者”,并认为他一旦有机会就会再次启动“跟踪软件”公司,因此维持禁令及其持续的报告要求是必要的,以保护公众免受其潜在的侵害。

📅 公众反馈与未来走向:FTC已公开征求公众对Zuckerman申诉的意见,反馈截止日期为8月19日。目前尚不清楚FTC将如何投票决定,此次裁决也将是观察新任联邦贸易委员会执法哲学的重要窗口,尤其是在网络安全和隐私保护领域。

The founder of a spyware company who was banned from the surveillance industry following an earlier data breach is now seeking to undo the ban, according to the Federal Trade Commission. 

In a notice on Friday, the federal watchdog said Scott Zuckerman sought to rescind or modify the 2021 ban imposed by the FTC on his company Support King and its subsidiaries. 

The ban included a provision requiring Zuckerman to maintain certain cybersecurity practices and undergo frequent audits for any of his businesses, after his spyware subsidiary SpyFone in 2018 spilled thousands of people’s private phone data, including photos, messages, and location data, to the public web.

The FTC’s then-five commissioners unanimously voted to ban Zuckerman and Support King from offering, selling, or promoting any phone monitoring app, preventing him from operating in the surveillance industry. 

Zuckerman now claims the order imposed an “unnecessary burden” because the financial costs needed to comply with the order made it more difficult for him to expand his other businesses.

The review of Zuckerman’s petition is expected to be closely watched by privacy advocates and critics of the surveillance industry, and could signal one of the first major cybersecurity tests for the Republican-controlled federal agency. If the agency moves to modify the order or vacate it entirely, it would pave the way for a surveillance vendor with a history of data breaches to legally operate again unimpeded.

Despite the ban taking effect in 2021, Zuckerman was caught involved in another spyware operation less than a year later. 

In 2022, TechCrunch received a cache of breached data from the servers of a phone spyware app called SpyTrac, which revealed it was being run by a group of freelance developers with direct ties to Support King, likely to skirt the FTC’s ban. The breached data also contained records from SpyFone, despite the FTC’s order requiring the company to delete the data it illegally obtained from victims’ phones. SpyTrac went offline soon after we contacted Zuckerman for comment.

Zuckerman’s petition is already facing criticism from the security community.

“I think this petition should be opposed loudly and vigorously. Mr. Zuckerman has repeatedly shown himself to be a bad actor, flouting the FTC by continuing to run his stalkerware company even after the ban was issued,” Eva Galperin, the director of cybersecurity at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, told TechCrunch.

“There is no doubt that both the ban and the continued reporting requirements are personally burdensome to him, but I would argue that that is the point,” said Galperin. “I have no doubt that Mr. Zuckerman would start up another stalkerware company the minute he thought he could get away with it.” 

It’s not clear how the FTC will vote on Zuckerman’s petition, nor did the agency set a date. A spokesperson for the FTC did not comment when reached by TechCrunch. The FTC is required by law to seek comments on petitions to undo the agency’s orders. 

The public can leave feedback on Zuckerman’s petition until August 19.

The FTC, chaired by Trump-appointed Andrew Ferguson, serves alongside two other Republicans, Mark Meador and Melissa Holyoak. Democratic commissioner Rebecca Kelly Slaughter was reappointed to the FTC last week after the Trump administration attempted to fire her. The remaining fifth commissioner seat remains vacant. 

In his petition, Zuckerman appealed to Ferguson directly and the commission’s “current enforcement philosophy,” which Zuckerman told TechCrunch was about “making sure regulations actually provide a positive impact for consumers and the public.”

Galperin, meanwhile, said it was important to maintain the reporting requirements on Zuckerman’s future ventures if they are “in any way connected to the internet because he has repeatedly demonstrated that he cannot secure sensitive user data.”

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Scott Zuckerman FTC SpyFone SpyTrac 网络安全 隐私保护 窃听软件
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