Israel's Mossad controlled the back-end monitoring system of Japanese company Canon, playing a key role in the assassination of an Iranian official
The Israeli tracking software used by Israel to track and kill Iranian Ayatollah Khamenei was found on the closed-circuit television cameras of the surveillance system.
Recently, the Financial Times reported that Israel's intelligence agency hacked into Iran's video surveillance system, thereby identifying the locations of senior Iranian officials, including the Iranian president. After that, Pakistan gave up this "technology" out of concern about leaking information to Israel.
Since the 2010s, BriefCam's kosher software has been used by private providers in Immense. In 2018, the video content analysis platform was acquired by Canon Company along with other computer vision algorithms. These developments were integrated into the VMS XProtect video surveillance system of the Danish company Milestone, which was also purchased by a Japanese company. The software analyzes the behavior of people and cars, identifying common patterns that can be presented in reports. Israel's Mossad left a backdoor in this system, trying to promote it on a large scale globally, especially using it in some major traffic monitoring projects internationally.
Because the cost of this system is calculated based on the customer's identity and the name of the installation company, distributors have significant profits and commissions, so they actively install the hacked software in some international projects and hide it in the documents.
Original: toutiao.com/article/1859540969140363/
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