Kaspersky says it obtained suspected NSA
hacking code from U.S. computer
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[October 25, 2017]
By Joseph Menn
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Moscow-based
Kaspersky Lab on Wednesday acknowledged that its security software had
taken source code for a secret American hacking tool from a personal
computer in the United States.
The admission came in a statement from the embattled company that
described preliminary results from an internal inquiry it launched into
media reports that the Russian government used Kaspersky anti-virus
software to collect National Security Agency technology.
While the explanation is considered plausible by some security experts,
U.S. officials who have been campaigning against using Kaspersky
software on sensitive computers are likely to seize on the admission
that the company took secret code that was not endangering its customer
to justify a ban.
Fears about Kaspersky's ties to Russian intelligence, and the capacity
of its anti-virus software to sniff out and remove files, prompted an
escalating series of warnings and actions from U.S. authorities over the
past year. They culminated in the Department of Homeland Security last
month barring government agencies from using Kaspersky products.
In a statement, the company said it stumbled on the code a year earlier
than the recent newspaper reports had it, in 2014. It said logs showed
that the consumer version of Kaspersky's popular product had been
analyzing questionable software from a U.S. computer and found a zip
file that was flagged as malicious.
While reviewing the file's contents, an analyst discovered it contained
the source code for a hacking tool later attributed to what Kaspersky
calls the Equation Group. The analyst reported the matter to Chief
Executive Eugene Kaspersky, who ordered that the company's copy of the
code be destroyed, the company said.
"Following a request from the CEO, the archive was deleted from all our
systems," the company said. It said no third parties saw the code,
though the media reports had said the spy tool had ended up in Russian
government hands.
The Wall Street Journal said on Oct. 5 that hackers working for the
Russian government appeared to have targeted the NSA worker by using
Kaspersky software to identify classified files. The New York Times
reported on Oct. 10 that Israeli officials reported the operation to the
United States after they hacked into Kaspersky's network.
Kaspersky did not say whether the computer belonged to an NSA worker who
improperly took home secret files, which is what U.S. officials say
happened. Kaspersky denied the Journal's report that its programs
searched for keywords including "top secret."
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A general view shows the headquarters of the anti-virus firm
Kaspersky Lab in Moscow, Russia September 15, 2017. REUTERS/Sergei
Karpukhin
The company said it found no evidence that it had been hacked by
Russian spies or anyone except the Israelis, though it suggested
others could have obtained the tools by hacking into the American's
computer through a back door it later spotted there.
The new 2014 date of the incident is intriguing, because Kaspersky
only announced its discovery of an espionage campaign by the
Equation Group in February 2015. At that time, Reuters cited former
NSA employees who said that Equation Group was an NSA project.
Kaspersky's Equation Group report was one of its most celebrated
findings, since it indicated that the group could infect firmware on
most computers. That gave the NSA almost undetectable presence.
Kaspersky later responded via email to a question by Reuters to
confirm that the company had first discovered the so-called Equation
Group programs in the spring of 2014.
It also did not say how often it takes uninfected, non-executable
files, which normally would pose no threat, from users' computers.
Former employees told Reuters in July that the company used that
technique to help identify suspected hackers. A Kaspersky
spokeswoman at the time did not explicitly deny the claim but
complained generally about "false allegations."
After that, the stories emerged suggesting that Kaspersky was a
witting or unwitting partner in espionage against the United States.
Kaspersky's consumer anti-virus software has won high marks from
reviewers.
It said Monday that it would submit the source code of its software
and future updates for inspection by independent parties.
(Reporting by Joseph Menn in San Francisco; Editing by Jim Finkle
and Eric Auchard)
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