LAPD using Israeli spy company to gather personal data, report says

Is the Los Angeles Police Department accessing data from your phone and social media accounts without a warrant?

That’s what is being claimed in a new report published by the nonprofit news outlet Knock LA.

That report says the LAPD’s partnership with the Israeli company Cobwebs Technologies uses “warrantless access to your personal information” and artificial intelligence and machine learning to surveil members of the public. While Cobwebs is Israeli in origin, it was reportedly purchased by American private equity firm Spire Capital for about $200 million.

“LAPD purchased the nearly $200,000-per-year subscription to the technology in 2022 with the help of a $600,000 DHS grant that focuses on terrorism prevention in urban areas,” according to Knock LA.

This purchase came after Meta — parent company of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp — banned Cobwebs accounts due to its status as a “surveillance-for-hire company” that targeted “activists, opposition politicians, and government officials in Hong Kong and Mexico,” Knock LA explained, citing a Meta report.

“The report pushes back against the surveillance company’s claims that it tracks only criminals and terrorists,” Knock LA added.

KTLA reached out to the LAPD for comment but did not hear back before publication.

The LAPD is not the only government agency in a contract with Cobwebs. The IRS also paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to “conduct undercover investigations online,” as reported by Motherboard.

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