Albuquerque Journal

Russian anti-virus CEO: Check out my code

He says U.S. intelligen­ce suspicions are misguided

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MOSCOW — The chief executive of Russia’s Kaspersky Lab says he’s ready to have his company’s source code examined by U.S. government officials to help dispel long-lingering suspicions about his company’s ties to the Kremlin.

In an interview with The Associated Press at his Moscow headquarte­rs, Eugene Kaspersky said Saturday that he’s also ready to move part of his research work to the U.S. to help counter rumors that he said were first started more than two decades ago out of profession­al jealousy.

“If the United States needs, we can disclose the source code,” he said, adding that he was ready to testify before U.S. lawmakers as well. “Anything I can do to prove that we don’t behave maliciousl­y, I will do it.”

Kaspersky, a mathematic­al engineer who attended a KGB-sponsored school and once worked for Russia’s Ministry of Defense, has long been eyed suspicious­ly by his competitor­s, particular­ly as his anti-virus products became popular in the U.S. market. Some speculate that Kaspersky, an engaging speaker and a fixture of the conference circuit, kept his Soviet-era intelligen­ce connection­s. Others say it’s unlikely that his company could operate independen­tly in Russia, where the economy is dominated by state-owned companies and the power of spy agencies has expanded dramatical­ly under President Vladimir Putin.

No firm evidence has ever been produced to back up the claims. But this has not stopped what was once gossip at tech conference­s from escalating into public accusation­s from American politician­s and intelligen­ce officials amid rising concerns over Russian interferen­ce in the United States.

Senior U.S. intelligen­ce officials have advised Congress to steer well clear of Kaspersky’s products, and Congress is weighing a proposal to ban the company from the Pentagon. Law enforcemen­t seems to be taking a hard look at the company as well. On Wednesday, NBC news reported that at least a dozen U.S. employees of Kaspersky were visited at their homes by FBI agents.

Kaspersky confirmed the NBC report, although he said he didn’t know what the focus of the FBI’s questionin­g was. He did say his relationsh­ip with the FBI was now shot.

The FBI didn’t immediatel­y return a message seeking comment.

Kaspersky agreed that cooperatio­n between Russia and the United States on cybercrime has often been “far from perfect.”

But lawmakers’ moves to single out the company for special punishment worries even Kaspersky’s critics, who note that it would set an unfavorabl­e precedent for American technology firms — many of whom are known to work closely with the U.S. National Security Agency.

Kaspersky defended his work, saying he never benefited from official protection of any kind.

“I do understand why we look strange. Because for Russia, it’s very unusual, a Russian IT that’s very successful everywhere around the world. But it’s true,” he said.

Kaspersky said his company does defensive work only, although he said some unnamed government­s had tried to nudge him toward hacking — what he calls “the dark side.”

“There were several times it was close to that,” he said, adding that the officials involved weren’t Russian.

“I stopped that immediatel­y. I don’t even want to talk about it,” he said.

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Eugene Kaspersky

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