A rights group is suing Britain's GCHQ eavesdropping agency over cyberattacks revealed by former intelligence worker Edward Snowden, saying it's the first time the agency has been sued over hacking.

The lawsuit, filed Tuesday by Privacy International, joins a slew of spawned by Snowden's disclosures. Other have filed lawsuits against the agency for its mass intercept of data flooding back and forth across the world's and satellites.

Unusually, Privacy's lawsuit challenges GCHQ's ability to hack into smartphones and computers, which it calls "potentially far more intrusive than any other current surveillance technique."

Richard Aldrich, the author of a book on GCHQ, said the agency worried about such lawsuits, explaining that judges were "much more unpredictable in this area" than a decade ago.