Main points
- Spyware is increasingly being deployed against civil society and journalists to monitor, intimidate them, and this can even lead to physical confrontations and arrests.
- Surveillance also creates the pre-conditions for corruption through reducing accountability, political participation, and narrowing civic space.
- Further regulatory controls can ensure that surveillance software is not used to illicit means, such as the EU’s Dual-use export control (2021) and the Wassenaar Arrangement.
- Civil society also has an important role in ensuring surveillance software is not deployed for corrupt means, through their investigations, advocacy and close collaborations with the cyber security industry.