@sanstis
lawyer | senior legal advisor @ The Citizen Lab | PhD Fellow in Law @ University of Oslo | parent | currently: transnational repression, digital surveillance & international human rights law | EU-based (Geneva, Oslo) | https://sienaanstis.com
I have written a little bit more about the broader framework around digital transnational repression (or the regulation of dissident cyber espionage, more precisely) here & limitations faced by victims: www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
Second, we see the court accepting in no uncertain terms the expert statements offered by my colleague @billmarczak.org that Al-Masarir's phones were hacked with Pegasus spyware. The court combines this with other evidence (e.g., KSA's history of using spyware) to conclude the hacking occurred.
It's a victory for several reasons. Two big ones. First, the court actually considered the substance of the claims (versus a default judgment). We see the court connecting cross-border hacking to actual, substantive wrongs caused to Al-Masarir.
Even if Al-Masarir faces challenges in recovering the damages awarded, this decision is a big step in the right direction. State immunity & evidentiary thresholds are raised as barriers insulating state authorities from liability for acts of (digital) transnational repression. Both failed here.
This is the (I believe first) significant legal victory for a target of (digital) transnational repression. Al-Masarir argued that his iPhones were hacked by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and that he was assaulted in London by KSA agents. The court found in favor of Al-Masarir on both points.
Important development in the Al-Masarir case in the UK: www.reuters.com/world/uk/sau...
Are you a recent law graduate with an interest in law, tech, human rights, doing good...and not spending time counting those billable hours? The Citizen Lab is hiring a (law-related) research officer. π€©
New article out with Jillian Sprenger in the International Journal of Human Rights on civil society's efforts to seek a remedy in the context of states' abuse of mercenary spyware: www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.....
Inside the Deportation Machine www.nytimes.com/interactive/...
More transparency is a critical component that in theory should be relatively easy to implement. Along with @penney.bsky.social & Niamh Leonard, we argued that such transparency is critical to the system's functioning: www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti....
Great report from @cdt.org on the failures of export control around spyware in the EU.
It is good to see enforcement of the EU Digital Services Act against X. We need more principled democratic governance of tech platforms, and penalties for non-compliance 1)
Elon Muskβs X Hit With $140 Million Fine in Europe www.nytimes.com/2025/12/05/t...
Join us on Nov 26 to explore how gender, technology, and authoritarianism intersect to shape womenβs participation in peace and security.
Get info & register: citizenlab.ca/2025/11/webi...
@amnesty.org @sheassociates.bsky.social @mmichae1sen.bsky.social @noura.bsky.social @sanstis.bsky.social
Yesterday, MEPs voted in favor of the European Parliament's first report dedicated to the transnational repression of human rights, urging the EU to take action to protect against this activity. www.europarl.europa.eu/news/en/pres...
Great essay by @nateschenkkan.bsky.social on the driving forces behind the "golden age" of transnational repression.
A few (early) thoughts on digital transnational repression and extraterritorial human rights obligations over at @bindinghook.bsky.social. Thanks for the opportunity to share my research (again!).
Spyware industry pockets EU subsidies while snooping on its citizens www.ftm.eu/articles/spy...
Great work by @vaspanagiotopoulos.com showing how EU taxpayer money funds a surveillance industry that sells to authoritarian regimes abroad.
"A tsunami of AI-enabled disinformation is already upon us, polluting the public sphere and seeping back into the language models that AI systems feed upon. What to do?"
My latest oped in @theglobeandmail.com π
www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/arti...
The final part of our AJIL Unbound series on reparations is now available online. Read "What Can International Law Repair?" now! www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
New positive development in the AlHathloul v. Dark Matter and others case with the court allowing the case to proceed despite lack of jurisdiction arguments made by the defendants: www.eff.org/document/alh...
Looking forward to this series on accountability for spyware harms from Just Security: www.justsecurity.org/117335/legal...
Ron Deibert is absolutely the voice that the infosec industry needs to be listening to right now. We are in a moment where fascism is consolidating power and most of the infosec industry is either playing along or is busy bragging about how much AI they've shoved into their products.
beijing forces thai art gallery to shutdown an exhibition on transnational repression.
hey siri, whatβs the definition of transnational repression?
www.reuters.com/world/china/...