Kaspersky Says It’s Not A National Security Threat To The US

Last week the US banned Kaspersky saying that it’s a national security risk. At the time, I could not find a response from the Russian software company. But clearly I didn’t look hard enough because now I have. Here’s what they said in part:

Kaspersky is aware of the decision of the Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) to place members of the company’s executive and senior leadership team on the sanctions list. The current step will not affect the company’s resilience as neither Kaspersky nor its subsidiary companies nor its CEO were designated by the OFAC. 

We regard the move as unjustified and baseless, being a continuation of recent U.S. government decisions based on the present geopolitical climate and theoretical concerns, rather than on a comprehensive evaluation of the integrity of company’s products and operations. Neither Kaspersky nor its management team has any ties to any government, and we consider the allegations quoted by the OFAC as pure speculation, which lacks concrete evidence of a threat posed to U.S. national security. None of the listed members have any ties to the Russian military and intelligence authorities or have anything to do with the Russian government’s cyber intelligence objectives.

John Gunn, CEO, Token had this to say:

Banning the use of Kaspersky software is a prudent and informed action. Kaspersky’s majority owner and CEO is a Russian national who lives in Russia and is subject to the jurisdiction of the Russian government. People who don’t do what Putin wants have a bad habit of falling out of windows. The code for many mature security applications is so complex that finding a designed-in vulnerability would be very challenging, and a “clean” version today could be updated to a malicious version at any time. Operating on a promise of trust from a country that is attacking us constantly would be bad strategy.

Here’s the thing. If you can’t trust the tools that you use to defend yourself against attackers, you shouldn’t use them. Which is why this ban makes sense despite the fact that some will find this as an over reaction by the US government. Will this ban make you stop using Kaspersky products? Sound off in the comments with your thoughts.

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