Greek spyware scandal exposes the cost of unchecked surveillance tech
Openverse: Government surveillance technology protestđˇ Ed Mays / wikimedia / CC BY 3.0
- â Spyware CEO implicates Greek government in mass phone hacks
- â Target list includes ministers, journalists, and military officials
- â Intellexaâs tools now a liability for clients and competitors
The founder of Intellexa, a shadowy spyware firm, has all but confirmed what privacy advocates have long suspected: Greeceâs Mitsotakis government allegedly authorized the hacking of dozens of phones belonging to senior officials, opposition leaders, journalists, and military personnel. The commentsâreported by TechCrunchâmark the first direct insider accusation from within Intellexa, a company already under fire for selling surveillance tools to regimes with questionable human rights records.
This isnât just another leak or whistleblower claim. Itâs the vendor itself pointing fingers at a client government, exposing the fragility of the spyware industryâs âplausible deniabilityâ model. For years, companies like Intellexa, NSO Group, and Candiru have thrived by selling tools to states while insisting theyâre merely providing âlawful interceptâ capabilities. But when the vendor publicly undermines that narrative, the entire ecosystem shakes.
The target list reads like a whoâs-who of Greek power structures: ministers, generals, reporters, and political rivals. Thatâs not accidental. Spyware isnât just about catching criminalsâitâs about controlling information flows. And when the tools are turned inward, the line between national security and political repression blurs fast.
When surveillance vendors turn on their own customers
Openverse: Government surveillance technology protestđˇ jurvetson / flickr / CC BY 2.0
For the surveillance tech market, this is a credibility crisis. Intellexaâs products were already under scrutiny after reports linked them to hacks in Egypt, Armenia, and Indonesia. Now, with the founderâs comments, potential buyers face a dilemma: Can they trust a vendor that might later expose them? The EUâs proposed spyware regulations suddenly look less like bureaucratic red tape and more like a necessary firewall.
Usersâwhether theyâre journalists, activists, or government officialsâare the ones paying the price. The workflow cost is real: Burner phones and encrypted apps become mandatory, not optional. Trust in digital communications erodes further. And for the spyware industry, the fallout is just beginning. Competitors like NSO Group, already battling lawsuits and export bans, now face a new risk: their own employees or executives turning on them.
The bigger question isnât whether Greeceâs government did this, but whether any government can resist the temptation when the tools are this powerfulâand the oversight this weak. Intellexaâs founder may have just handed regulators the ammunition they needed to start treating spyware like the dual-use weapon it is.