[ISN] Russia˘s Top Cyber Sleuth Foils US Spies, Helps Kremlin Pals

From: InfoSec News <alerts_at_private>
Date: Mon, 23 Jul 2012 11:03:23 -0500 (CDT)
http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2012/07/ff_kaspersky/

By Noah Shachtman
Danger Room
Wired.com
July 23, 2012

It’s early February in Cancun, Mexico. A group of 60 or so financial 
analysts, reporters, diplomats, and cybersecurity specialists shake off 
the previous night’s tequila and file into a ballroom at the 
Ritz-Carlton hotel. At the front of the room, a giant screen shows a 
globe targeted by crosshairs. Cancun is in the center of the bull’s-eye.

A ruddy-faced, unshaven man bounds onstage. Wearing a wrinkled white 
polo shirt with a pair of red sunglasses perched on his head, he looks 
more like a beach bum who’s lost his way than a business executive. In 
fact, he’s one of Russia’s richest men—the CEO of what is arguably the 
most important Internet security company in the world. His name is 
Eugene Kaspersky, and he paid for almost everyone in the audience to 
come here. “Buenos dias,” he says in a throaty Russian accent, as he 
apologizes for missing the previous night’s boozy activities. Over the 
past 72 hours, Kaspersky explains, he flew from Mexico to Germany and 
back to take part in another conference. “Kissinger, McCain, presidents, 
government ministers” were all there, he says. “I have panel. Left of 
me, minister of defense of Italy. Right of me, former head of CIA. I’m 
like, ‘Whoa, colleagues.’”

He’s bragging to be sure, but Kaspersky may be selling himself short. 
The Italian defense minister isn’t going to determine whether criminals 
or governments get their hands on your data. Kaspersky and his company, 
Kaspersky Lab, very well might. Between 2009 and 2010, according to 
Forbes, retail sales of Kaspersky antivirus software increased 177 
percent, reaching almost 4.5 million a year—nearly as much as its rivals 
Symantec and McAfee combined. Worldwide, 50 million people are now 
members of the Kaspersky Security Network, sending data to the company’s 
Moscow headquarters every time they download an application to their 
desktop. Microsoft, Cisco, and Juniper Networks all embed Kaspersky code 
in their products—effectively giving the company 300 million users. When 
it comes to keeping computers free from infection, Kaspersky Lab is on 
its way to becoming an industry leader.

But this still doesn’t fully capture Kaspersky’s influence. Back in 
2010, a researcher now working for Kaspersky discovered Stuxnet, the 
US-Israeli worm that wrecked nearly a thousand Iranian centrifuges and 
became the world’s first openly acknowledged cyberweapon. In May of this 
year, Kaspersky’s elite antihackers exposed a second weaponized computer 
program, which they dubbed Flame. It was subsequently revealed to be 
another US-Israeli operation aimed at Iran. In other words, Kaspersky 
Lab isn’t just an antivirus company; it’s also a leader in uncovering 
cyber-espionage.

Serving at the pinnacle of such an organization would be a remarkably 
powerful position for any man. But Kaspersky’s rise is particularly 
notable—and to some, downright troubling—given his KGB-sponsored 
training, his tenure as a Soviet intelligence officer, his alliance with 
Vladimir Putin’s regime, and his deep and ongoing relationship with 
Russia’s Federal Security Service, or FSB. Of course, none of this 
history is ever mentioned in Cancun.

[...]

--
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Received on Mon Jul 23 2012 - 09:03:23 PDT

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