The Russian antivirus company Kaspersky Labs has announced it is leaving the United States, following last month's decision by the Biden administration to ban the sale of Kaspersky software over alleged links to the Kremlin. A Kaspersky spokesperson told the BBC it was a «sad and difficult decision» but that «business opportunities in the country are no longer viable».
Announcing the ban last month, US Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said that Moscow's alleged influence over Kaspersky was a risk to US infrastructure. «Russia has shown it has the capacity—and even more than that, the intent—to exploit Russian companies like Kaspersky to collect and weaponize the personal information of Americans,» said Raimondo. The ban meant Kaspersky would no longer be allowed to sell or provide updates to its software after September 29 and, the day after it was announced, the US Treasury announced sanctions on a dozen Kaspersky executives for good measure, though oddly did not target CEO and co-founder Eugene Kaspersky.
Kaspersky Labs initially said it intended to challenge the ban in court, but that appears to have gone by the wayside (let's face it, a Russian firm taking on the US government in a US court over national security was never going to end well). «Starting from July 20, 2024 Kaspersky will gradually wind down its US operations and eliminate US-based positions,» said a statement issued to Zero Day. «The decision and process follows the final determination by the US Department of Commerce, prohibiting the sales and distribution of Kaspersky products in the US.»
The ban didn't come out of nowhere: the US Department of Homeland Security issued a directive in 2017 banning federal agencies from using Kaspersky software, swiftly followed by a 2018 ban on any use by the US military.
Kaspersky Labs was founded in 1999 and has been operating in the US since 2005. Its headquarters are in Moscow, with offices worldwide, and the company claims over 400 million customers use its
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