
Washington: Spyware firm NSO Group Ltd. (spyware firm NSO Group Ltd.) may default due to debts. It is believed that due to this the company may decide to close and sell the disputed Pegasus. The company has held talks with several investment funds in this regard in which it was discussed to refinance it or sell it outright. According to the news agency Bloomberg, on the condition of anonymity, people informed about the matter said that the company would ask Moelis & Co for help. Consultants brought from Lenders to the company are getting advice from Willkie Farr’s lawyers. The new owners probably include two Americans who have discussed buying and discontinuing Pegasus.
According to Bloomberg, a person familiar with the matter said that in such a situation the funds would infuse $200 million of fresh capital into the company. The new owners probably include two Americans who have discussed buying and discontinuing Pegasus. According to Bloomberg, a person familiar with the matter said that in such a situation the funds would infuse $200 million of fresh capital into the company.
Datawire was the first to inform
It is believed that through this, Pegasus’s information will be protected in the cyber world and the Israeli company’s drone technology will be developed. Representatives for NSO, Moelis, and Willkie Farr declined to provide any information, according to Bloomberg. The potential transaction was previously reported by Debtwire.

Let us tell you that Pegasus software can track the user’s mobile phone. The NSO has been at the center of high-profile privacy and human rights abuses after cases of its alleged abuse. Pegasus was also reported in recent months to hack the mobile phones of at least nine State Department employees.