
The Federal Bureau of Prisons confirms to NPR that it uses the company's products. Other than vodka, the Russian product most familiar to Americans is probably the anti-virus software made by Moscow-based Kaspersky Lab.īest Buy loads some of the computers it sells with Kaspersky Lab software. Kaspersky and his firm have ties to the Russian government but say that should not be cause for concern in the West, where the company's cybersecurity software is widely used.Īlexander Zemlianichenko Jr./Bloomberg via Getty Images It also said it would expand a program where it pays independent security researchers to find security vulnerabilities in its products, boosting the maximum award size to $100,000 from $5,000.Eugene Kaspersky, founder and chief executive officer of Kaspersky Lab, at his office in Moscow last December. The company said it would open "transparency centers" in Asia, Europe and the United States where customers, governments and others can access results of the outside reviews and discuss any concerns about the security of Kaspersky products. "We want to show how we’re completely open and transparent," he said. The Trump administration decision represented a sharp response to what US intelligence agencies have described as a national security threat posed by Russia in cyberspace, following a US election year marred by allegations that Moscow weaponised the Internet in an attempt to influence its outcome.Ĭhief Executive Officer Eugene Kaspersky said in a statement that he believed the steps announced on Monday would help restore trust in his company. Kaspersky has repeatedly denied those accusations, saying it has not helped Russia or other governments engage in espionage. US President Donald Trump's administration last month barred government agencies from using Kaspersky Lab antivirus products, citing concerns that the company was vulnerable to Kremlin influence and that use of its software could jeopardize national security. The company did not name the outside reviewers, but said in a statement that it would soon announce parties with "strong credentials in software security and assurance testing for cyber-security products." Reviews of the software, which is used on some 400 million computers worldwide, will begin by the first quarter of next year, the company said. Kaspersky said in a statement that it would submit the source code of its software and future product updates for review by "the broader information-security community and other stakeholders." It also vowed to have outside parties review other aspects of its business, including software development.


Kaspersky Lab will ask independent parties to conduct security reviews of its widely used antivirus software to help dispel allegations that the Russian government uses the products to conduct espionage, the Moscow-based company said on Monday.
