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  • Sergei Savostyanov via Getty Images

    Kaspersky says it briefly possessed classified NSA files

    by 
    Mallory Locklear
    Mallory Locklear
    10.25.2017

    Earlier this month, reports surfaced that classified NSA documents detailing how US agencies defend their cyber networks and how they breach foreign ones were stolen by Russian hackers in 2015. Those reports noted that the files were spotted through Kaspersky security software used by an NSA contractor who had saved the classified documents on a home computer. Well, Kaspersky has now provided some more information about the incident and it has acknowledged that it did in fact have classified NSA materials in its possession, the Associated Press reports.

  • Sergei Karpukhin / Reuters

    Kaspersky hopes independent review will restore trust in its software

    by 
    Timothy J. Seppala
    Timothy J. Seppala
    10.23.2017

    Security software firm Kaspersky has had a rough year. As a means of trying to fix its public image, the company will now submit the source code for its anti-virus software to independent third-parties for review, Reuters reports. That starts next year, and there's also plans to open three "transparency centers" around the world by 2020. The first will open in 2018.

  • Sportsfile (Web Summit) / Flickr

    Israel warned the US about Kaspersky after hacking its network

    by 
    Saqib Shah
    Saqib Shah
    10.11.2017

    Kaspersky is in hot water...again. The US government recently prohibited federal agencies from using the company's products, and the FBI is reportedly convincing private entities to do the same. Its latest headache is linked to the NSA cyberattacks allegedly carried out by Russian hackers, who made away with official cyber defense material in 2015. The US intelligence agency claimed it noticed the stolen files using Kaspersky software. Little else was revealed about the incident (news of which broke last week) until now. It seems Israeli officials tipped off the US about the Russian intrusion, having hacked into Kaspersky's network, according to The New York Times.

  • Vyacheslav Prokofyev/TASS via Getty Images

    Kaspersky offers code to prove it's not a Russian stooge

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    07.02.2017

    Kaspersky Lab is understandably worried that it might lose US government contracts over fears that it's in bed with the Russian government, and it's making a dramatic offer in a bid to keep the money flowing. Founder Eugene Kaspersky tells the AP that he's willing to provide source code to prove that his online security company isn't a Trojan horse for Russian spies. He's ready to testify in front of Congress, too -- "anything" to show that his company is above board.