Meta Platforms saw its stock edge lower as legal tensions escalated in its long-running dispute with Israeli spyware maker NSO Group, with fresh court developments suggesting a possible contempt order over alleged violations of a prior injunction.
Meta Platforms, Inc., META
Meta has intensified its legal push by seeking a federal contempt order against NSO Group. The move follows allegations that the spyware company continued targeting WhatsApp users despite being permanently barred from doing so by a US court order. Investors reacted cautiously as the renewed legal escalation added uncertainty around ongoing regulatory and legal risks tied to Meta’s messaging ecosystem.
The case adds another layer to a dispute that has already spanned several years, with courts previously ruling in favor of WhatsApp and imposing financial penalties and restrictions on NSO’s activities.
According to Meta, WhatsApp recently identified and disrupted new spear-phishing campaigns linked to NSO. These attempts allegedly resembled earlier “1-click phishing” methods, where a single malicious link could compromise a device or user account.
WhatsApp also reportedly removed test accounts and group structures that were believed to be used by NSO to simulate or facilitate attack pathways. The company emphasized that these actions occurred even after a permanent injunction had explicitly barred NSO from targeting WhatsApp infrastructure or users.
The recurrence of such activity has raised concerns about the enforceability of court restrictions in the cybersecurity and spyware industry.
The dispute between Meta and NSO has already passed multiple legal milestones. In late 2024, a US district court ruled in favor of WhatsApp. That was followed by a jury awarding damages in 2025, reinforcing Meta’s position that NSO had unlawfully exploited its platform.
A permanent injunction was later issued, prohibiting NSO from accessing or targeting WhatsApp systems. However, Meta now argues that the company has continued to operate in ways that may violate that court order, prompting the latest request for contempt proceedings.
NSO has appealed the earlier rulings, including liability findings, damages, and the injunction itself, in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, keeping the legal battle ongoing.
Meta has also pointed to broader concerns about NSO’s historical activity. The company claims NSO previously exploited WhatsApp’s infrastructure in 2019 to deploy its Pegasus spyware against more than 1,400 individuals across at least 20 countries before the vulnerability was blocked.
The spyware controversy has drawn significant attention from civil society groups. Recently, 12 civil rights organizations, digital rights advocates, and cybersecurity researchers submitted amicus briefs supporting Meta’s enforcement of the injunction, signaling wider concern about commercial spyware misuse.
NSO, however, has not publicly responded to the latest allegations or requests for comment regarding the contempt proceedings.
While Meta’s stock decline was modest, analysts note that ongoing legal disputes of this scale can weigh on investor sentiment, particularly when they involve platform integrity and global regulatory scrutiny. The company continues to balance legal enforcement actions with broader concerns around user security and platform trust.
For now, markets appear to be pricing in uncertainty rather than immediate financial impact, as the case moves deeper into appellate and enforcement stages.
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