Intellexa founder, three others sentenced to 8 years in prison over Greek spyware scandal
好,我现在需要帮用户总结这篇文章的内容,控制在100字以内。首先,我得通读整篇文章,抓住主要信息。 文章讲的是希腊法院判决了Intellexa Consortium的创始人Tal Dilian和他的三个同伙,他们因间谍软件丑闻被判处超过126年监禁,但由于希腊法律,实际服刑8年。被告包括Sara Hamou、Felix Bitzios和Yiannis Lavranos。Lavranos的公司Krikel购买了Intellexa的Predator间谍软件,在2020-2021年间用于监视90多名希腊人,包括记者、政客和检察官。被告否认指控,但法院认定他们非法侵入私人通讯系统和违反隐私法。判决可能对Intellexa产生严重影响,尽管被告可能上诉并逃离希腊,但他们在欧洲的定罪可能会影响他们在其他国家的活动。受害者之一Thanasis Koukakis表示判决是重要胜利,但调查仍在继续。 接下来,我需要将这些信息浓缩到100字以内。要包含主要人物、事件、结果和影响。 可能的结构:希腊法院判决某人及其同伙因间谍软件案获刑多年;受害者包括记者和政客;判决可能影响公司运营;受害者对此表示欢迎但认为调查才刚开始。 现在试着组织语言: “希腊法院判处Intellexa创始人及其三名同伙因间谍软件案超过126年监禁(实际服刑8年),受害者包括记者和政客。判决可能对该公司产生严重影响。” 这样大约70字左右,符合要求。 </think> 希腊法院判处Intellexa创始人及其三名同伙因间谍软件案超过126年监禁(实际服刑8年),受害者包括记者和政客。判决可能对该公司产生严重影响。 2026-2-26 18:34:27 Author: therecord.media(查看原文) 阅读量:4 收藏

A Greek court on Thursday sentenced the founder of the Intellexa Consortium and three associates to prison for their role in a sprawling spyware scandal that has dominated Greek headlines since it came to light in 2022.

The Misdemeanour Court in Athens sentenced the defendants to more than 126 years in prison, but under Greek law they will only serve eight years, according to local news reports.

The sentences will be appealed and the defendants will remain free until the appeal process concludes.

The defendants are Intellexa founder Tal Dilian; Sara Hamou, a corporate off-shoring specialist who provided managerial services to the consortium; Felix Bitzios, a former deputy administrator of Intellexa; and Yiannis Lavranos. 

Lavranos’s company, Krikel — a surveillance tools supplier — allegedly purchased Predator, the spyware made by Intellexa that was used to snoop on more than 90 Greeks from 2020-2021, local news reports said. Victims include a prominent financial journalist, opposition politicians, government ministers, intelligence service operatives and prosecutors.The defendants reportedly denied wrongdoing but the Greek court found them guilty of several counts of unlawful access to private communication systems and violations of privacy and data laws. 

The convictions are a significant turn of events for the spyware maker, which has been accused of facilitating spying on dozens of members of civil society worldwide along with the president of the European Parliament, the president of Taiwan and U.S. senators.

The convictions could have a devastating effect on Intellexa, experts said, even if the defendants flee to a jurisdiction that does not extradite to Greece.

“When you're found guilty of a crime in a European court and there's a prison sentence attached, you are potentially expeditable in a lot of countries around the world that have treaties with Greece,” said John Scott-Railton, a digital forensic researcher at the Citizen Lab who helped document the Predator targeting in Greece. “Nobody's going to want to bank you if you're sentenced in absentia.”

Scott-Railton noted that the judge said the conduct and testimony revealed at trial warrants a referral for potential future prosecution on additional charges.

“This is going to be a huge ball and chain that Intellexa’s executives are going to be dragging around,” he said, adding that the verdict proves the importance of investigating spyware abuses.

One of the victims of the spying, financial journalist Thanasis Koukakis, said he is relieved by the verdict, but believes the process is just beginning. He noted that the court ruled that prosecutors must open an inquiry to probe whether more serious espionage charges are also warranted.

“We’re still in the beginning,” he told Recorded Future News. 

Still, he described the day as an important win, saying that the ruling demonstrated that Greek citizens will not be “defenseless in the face of arbitrary actions by those who possess the technical expertise and the means to monitor them, without any real justification.” 

The Citizen Lab found that Koukakis’s device was infected with Predator at least between July and September 2021.

On February 18, Amnesty International revealed that Predator was used to infect the phone of a prominent press freedom advocate in Angola in 2024. In December, Amnesty researchers found a Pakistani human rights lawyer had also been targeted with Predator during the summer of 2025.

Intellexa executives and consultants, including Dilian and Hamou, were sanctioned by the Biden administration in 2024. In December, the Trump administration reversed the sanctions against Hamou and two other Intellexa executives, though Dilian remains on the list.

Despite the sanctions, Intellexa has proven resilient and its spyware infrastructure continues to be detected worldwide.

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Suzanne Smalley

Suzanne Smalley

is a reporter covering digital privacy, surveillance technologies and cybersecurity policy for The Record. She was previously a cybersecurity reporter at CyberScoop. Earlier in her career Suzanne covered the Boston Police Department for the Boston Globe and two presidential campaign cycles for Newsweek. She lives in Washington with her husband and three children.


文章来源: https://therecord.media/spyware-intellexa-greece-sentenced
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