Skip to main content

Jeff Bezos’ phone allegedly hacked by Saudi crown prince’s WhatsApp message

 

A new forensic analysis suggests that data from Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos’ phone was hacked in 2018 by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) — via a malicious video file that was able to infiltrate Bezos’ phone and much of his data.

Recommended Videos

Bezos and Salman had talked via WhatsApp before the hack, according to an exclusive Guardian report, and an encrypted message sent by Salman’s number most likely contained the malicious video file. It’s not clear what and how much data was taken, nor what the data could have been used for.

Bezos was reportedly targeted because of his company, Nash Holdings, and its ownership of the Washington Post, specifically the paper’s aggressive coverage of Saudi Arabia around the time of the hack.

Jeff Bezos
Mark Ralston / Getty Images

In October 2018, five months after the alleged hack, Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi was assassinated by the Saudi Arabian government. The CIA has since said that Salman ordered Khashoggi’s assassination. 

“He probably believed that if he got something on Bezos, it could shape coverage of Saudi Arabia in the Post. It is clear that the Saudis have no real boundaries or limits in terms of what they are prepared to do in order to protect and advance MBS, whether it is going after the head of one of the largest companies in the world or a dissident who is on their own,” Middle East expert Andrew Miller told the Guardian.

On Twitter, the Saudi embassy denied involvement by Saudi Arabia in the incident, calling the reports “absurd.”

99% of the accusations aginst the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia are based on unnamed fake sources! If any on those claims were true, why no evidence have been presented yet! It is just a smear campaign sponsored by the enemies of Prince Mohammed in the ME and the West.

— بن هباس 🇸🇦 (@5a1di) January 22, 2020

Bezos’ team also told the Guardian that they found “high confidence” that the Saudis were the ones to leak the information that Bezos was having an affair, which landed the tech giant in the headlines for a few months in 2019. 

According to the Guardian, the evidence surrounding the hack is credible enough for “investigators to be considering a formal approach to Saudi Arabia to ask for an explanation.”

Digital Trends reached out to Amazon and WhatsApp for comment on the hack. We will update this story once we hear back. 

Aside from Bezos, bin Salman has also been linked to presidential adviser and President Donald Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, whom he also has chatted with on WhatsApp. According to The Intercept, Salman has even said that Kushner is “in his pocket.”

Allison Matyus
Allison Matyus is a general news reporter at Digital Trends. She covers any and all tech news, including issues around social…
Gemini brings a fantastic PDF superpower to Files by Google app
step of Gemini processing a PDF in Files by Google app.

Google is on a quest to push its Gemini AI chatbot in as many productivity tools as possible. The latest app to get some generative AI lift is the Files by Google app, which now automatically pulls up Gemini analysis when you open a PDF document.

The feature, which was first shared on the r/Android Reddit community, is now live for phones running Android 15. Digital Trends tested this feature on a Pixel 9 running the stable build of Android 15 and the latest version of Google’s file manager app.

Read more
Disney co-chairman reveals why The Acolyte was canceled after one season
Sol wields his lightsaber in The Acolyte episode 8.

Lucasfilm may be in the midst of experiencing a wave of positive attention and success thanks to its latest TV series, Skeleton Crew, but the Jude Law-starring sci-fi show isn't the only Star Wars title that has premiered on Disney+ this year. This past summer, Lucasfilm also debuted The Acolyte, a Sith-centric show set around 100 years before the events of Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace. Across its eight episodes, the series proved to be critically divisive, and it was only a month after The Acolyte's finale aired that Disney and Lucasfilm announced they would not be bringing the show back for a second season.

In a recent interview with Vulture, Disney Entertainment co-chairman Alan Bergman shed some light on the behind-the-scenes decision to cancel The Acolyte after just one season. "As it relates to Acolyte, we were happy with our performance, but it wasn’t where we needed it to be given the cost structure of that title, quite frankly, to go and make a season 2," Bergman revealed. "That’s the reason why we didn’t do that."

Read more
James Gunn calls Creature Commandos episode the saddest thing he’s ever written
james gunn calls creature commandos weasel episode saddest thing ever written sits at the bottom of a staircase in

Creature Commandos has been splitting its time as of late between the past and present. Its recent episodes have both propelled the show's present-day plot forward and also explored the pasts of characters like The Bride (Indira Varma) and G.I. Robot (Sean Gunn), offering new insights into the tragic events that shaped their identities and led them to their current circumstances. Creature Commandos' fourth and most recent episode, Chasing Squirrels, does the same for Weasel (also Sean Gunn), revealing the horrifying reasons the character was incorrectly blamed for the deaths of multiple schoolchildren.

The episode refrains from explaining what Weasel is or how the character came to be, but it doesn't shy away from the gruesome and tragic details of the "crime" that turned him into a full-blown monster in society's eyes. In an interview with Variety, Creature Commandos creator and DC Studios co-CEO James Gunn reflected on the episode, which is emotionally and narratively dark, even by the Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 filmmaker's standards.

Read more