Kaspersky Lab Banned From Advertising on Twitter Because of Its Alleged Ties With Russian Intelligence Agencies (cyberscoop.com) 45
An anonymous reader shares a report: Russian cybersecurity company Kaspersky Lab has been banned from advertising on Twitter due to its allegedly close and active ties between the company and Russian intelligence agencies, according to the social network. The ban is the latest blow in an ongoing saga for Kaspersky, which includes two ongoing legal battles with the U.S. government. Eugene Kaspersky, CEO of Kaspersky Lab, took to Twitter on Friday to condemn the ban. A Twitter spokesperson reiterated that the "decision is based on our determination that Kaspersky Lab operates using a business model that inherently conflicts with acceptable Twitter Ads business practices."
What, they're profitable? (Score:5, Informative)
What, they're profitable? (ducks)
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*FUD - Fear, Uncertainity and Doubt.
If you're a Russian company ... (Score:5, Insightful)
If you're a Russian company, located in Russia, it would be almost impossible to believe you're not complicit with the Russian government.
Likewise, if you're an American company, located in the US, it would also be impossible to believe you're not complicit with the American government.
Because both governments have shown they're more than willing to engage/force tech companies to play ball.
Kaspersky may well be completely above board, but it's impossible to verify that.
Exactly. That's why you should use... (Score:1)
...an AV that is not beholden to any government, whether Russian, American, etc. They can all be strong armed by their government into compromising your security. The solution?
Open source AV. The Founding Fathers would have used this.
That is all.
Re: Exactly. That's why you should use... (Score:2)
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> The Founding Fathers would have used this.
That's an odd plug.
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wait, still? how long has it been?
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Nope: guilty forever as you cant prove that something does not exist.
Re: If you're a Russian company ... (Score:2)
I want Twitter to state that they're not under any NSL's currently.
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Chances of Twitter not being under multiple NSLs approaches zero, so I doubt they'll ever make such a statement truthfully. (The ambiguous reference works either way.)
The way I see it... (Score:5, Insightful)
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they also seem to have pissed off American intelligence agencies by detecting their spyware or not "collaborating" with them...
Bingo! And that is precisely why I use Kaspersky software. They simply must be better for me if they have western officials in such a lather.
Makes me wonder what's really happening with Symantec, McAfee, Trend, etc.
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And that is precisely why I use Kaspersky software.
Something something frying pan something fire something.... dammit... now I want bacon!
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It's a worthy goal to 'baconify' discussion threads so that as many people as possible end up thinking about bacon.
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Stuxnet
Flame
Equation Group https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Android cyber-espionage by 60 governments.
A sudden disturbance in the twitterverse (Score:4, Insightful)
As if millions of voices on social media censored without obvious cause or recourse cried out in sympathy and were suddenly silenced.
What Exactly Have they Done? (Score:3)
I've seen a lot of controversy surrounding this company, but I have yet to see anything conclusive that says they relaying information back to Russian authorities.
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That needs a lot of users in the USA, Canada, the UK, Russia, Japan, the EU as way of detecting regional differences in real time.
What the US, UK gov will use globally as malware but trust in their own nations would stand out.
The regional collect it all efforts.
What gov bailed malware, network patterns is not out in the wild in the USA, 5 eye nations then becomes what stands out globally.
Understanding the internet, the moveme
US keeps advertising Kaspersky products (Score:2)
Popcorn Time! (Score:2)
The hell with Twitter (Score:2)