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Kaspersky falls in US-Russia cyber-tensions

Latest accusations highlight what some see as a simmering cyberwar between the two powers.

The security software firm Kaspersky has become the focal point in an escalating conflict in cyberspace between the United States and Russia. The Russian-based company has been accused of being a vehicle for hackers to steal security secrets from the US National Security Agency and was banned by all American government agencies last month.

But it remains unclear if Kaspersky was part of a scheme or an unwilling accomplice in an espionage effort. The software firm has argued it has no ties to any government and said in a recent statement it is simply "caught in the middle of a geopolitical fight." But the latest accusations highlight what some see as a simmering cyberwar between the two powers.

"Currently, we're losing," said James Lewis, a fellow with the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies. "It's not the kind of conflict we're used to." The Kaspersky allegations come in the wake of an apparent Russian-led effort to manipulate social media and influence the 2016 US presidential election.

Russia has an advantage because "they have figured out how to use our civil liberties against us and there's not much we can do about it," Lewis said. "We don't have a group that does this kind of psychological warfare and we don't have the legal authority to defend against it."

Peter Singer, a New America Foundation strategist and author who has written on 21st-century warfare, agreed that Russia is gaining ground in this cyber conflict. "If it's a 'cyberwar,' it is akin to a Cold War-style back-and-forth of everything from stealing secrets to political influence operations," Singer said. "Given that the Russians have so far got away with no real consequences for the biggest, most impactful operation, the hacks and influence campaign targeting the 2016 US election, I'd say they are doing pretty well."

Cat-and-mouse game

But Gabriel Weimann, a professor at Israel's University of Haifa and author who has written on cybersecurity, said it may be premature to declare Russia the winner. "We don't really know the achievements of NSA in monitoring the web, this kind of information is secret," Weimann said.

"This is a cat-and-mouse game. You respond to breaking in and the other side responds and it becomes more dangerous and more sophisticated." On Tuesday, the New York Times reported that Israeli intelligence had hacked into the Kaspersky network and upon detecting the Russian intrusion, alerted the United States, which led to a decision last month for Kaspersky software to be removed from US government computers.

The online news site CyberScoop, citing anonymous sources, reported separately this week that Kaspersky as early as 2015 sought to promote its anti-virus software as a tool to track extremists in the Middle East. The report said that some US officials were intrigued by the offer, but those technical members of the intelligence community interpreted this as meaning that Kaspersky's anti-virus software could be used as a spying tool.

CyberScoop said that Russian officials from the FSB, the successor to the KGB, told US officials in 2015 not to interfere with Kaspersky software, a message that set off alarm bells. The Wall Street Journal meanwhile reported that the Russian government was able to modify Kaspersky software to turn it into an espionage tool. Anti-virus software such as those created by Kaspersky can become a tool for espionage because it scans and can access all files on a computer or network.

Eugene Kaspersky, the founder of the company which bears his name, has long denied any connection to the Russian government but said on Twitter Monday he was launching an internal investigation into the latest allegations. A company statement this week said, "Kaspersky Lab has never helped, nor will help, for any government in the world with its cyberespionage efforts, and contrary to erroneous reports, Kaspersky Lab software does not contain any undeclared capabilities such as backdoors as that would be illegal and unethical."

Weimann said he believes Kaspersky was likely "piggybacked" by the Russian government for espionage rather than a willing participant. Lewis agreed, saying Kaspersky is probably "an unwilling tool" in the Russian espionage effort. Lewis said that Eugene Kaspersky "would love to be (part of) a private company headquartered in London but the Russian government won't let him."

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