
Klaus Schwab, founder of the World Economic Forum, says a routine security inspection found a covert listening device in his home office in Geneva, Bloomberg reports. The 88-year-old has filed a criminal complaint against persons unknown.
The device was reportedly discovered at his private home close to the WEF’s premises. Who planted it, and when, is not known, and the complaint now puts the matter in the hands of Geneva authorities.
The discovery caps a turbulent stretch for Schwab. He resigned as WEF chairman in April 2025 after an anonymous whistleblower letter accused him and his wife of misusing forum resources.
An external investigation by Zurich law firm Homburger later found no evidence of material wrongdoing. Schwab has filed defamation complaints against his anonymous accusers and dismissed the allegations as constructed.
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The forum is now run day to day by former Norwegian foreign minister Borge Brende, with Peter Brabeck-Letmathe serving as interim chairman while a successor search continues. Schwab remains a totemic, and contested, figure in Davos circles.
Elites under surveillance
If confirmed, the bug would make Schwab the latest European public figure caught in a surveillance wave that has already reached the EU’s institutions, where a lawmaker investigating spyware was himself hacked with Pegasus. Europe’s commercial surveillance industry is booming even as regulators hesitate.
A physical bug is old-school tradecraft compared with the phone implants that turn devices into pocket spies. The tools differ, but the target class, politicians, executives, and journalists, stays the same.
Switzerland has had its own recent collisions between technology and power, with the country’s finance minister filing criminal charges over AI-generated abuse. Greece’s Predator affair showed how surveillance scandals can consume governments entirely.
The complaint names no suspects, and bug attributions rarely stick. For a man who spent five decades convening the powerful, the list of people who might want to listen is not short.
Published July 6, 2026 - 6:25 pm UTC
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View original source — The Next Web ↗

