Two parts that stuck out for me were:
“There’s no hiding from it. They can turn your phone into a camera. They can turn it into a microphone. You can turn the power off, they can still use the device. It’s the most intrusive thing that exists in the world today.”
and
He also learned from the April 2023 affidavit that the RCMP had ordered an ODIT on his union phone during the time he was engaged in collective bargaining conversations that year. He says this breached not only his privacy, but the privacy of some 19,000 union members.
It’s pretty fishy when they’re hacking phones of union officials, especially during negotiations. If it can be proven they used that info for the negotiations, that should be criminal charges against the officers conducting such surveillance, because it is very obviously not appropriate.
The only time tools like this should be used is for actual national security incidents, and there needs to be an independent oversight board involved in every case. Just allowing police to determine when they should or should not do it is insufficient, and we need to have actual laws that determine these procedures.
Every use of these tools (I’m sure it’s NSO Group’s stuff, which is why they won’t say who the supplier is) needs to be reviewed and people that should not have been surveilled need to be notified so they can determine proper legal action.