Slashdot Mirror


Israeli Spies 'Watched Russian Agents Breach Kaspersky Software' (bbc.com)

Israeli spies looked on as Russian hackers breached Kaspersky cyber-security software two years ago, according to reports. From a report: The Russians were allegedly attempting to gather data on US intelligence programs, according to the New York Times and Washington Post. Israeli agents made the discovery after breaching the software themselves. Kaspersky has said it was neither involved in nor aware of the situation and denies collusion with authorities. Last month, the US government decided to stop using the Russian firm's software on its computers. The Israelis are said to have notified the US, which led to the ban on Kaspersky programs. The New York Times said that the situation had been described by "multiple people who have been briefed on the matter."

17 of 194 comments (clear)

  1. I don't know who's spying who by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So Israel was spying on the US and saw that Russia was spying on the US.
    Great. Wish they'd both die in a fire.

    1. Re:I don't know who's spying who by jedidiah · · Score: 5, Informative

      It's kind of like that time that particularly famous traitor aired our own dirty laundry and it turned out that we spy on all of our allies.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    2. Re:I don't know who's spying who by VocationalZero · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The Israelis notified the US that they were able to breach Kaspersky on their systems. The Russians did not. Speaks a lot about the intent. Not sure how you missed that.

    3. Re:I don't know who's spying who by nagora · · Score: 5, Insightful

      We need more traitors like him to protect us from assholes like you who would sell us all down the river for any bastard wrapped in a flag.

      --
      "Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
    4. Re: I don't know who's spying who by F.Ultra · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Which of course is not what happened. He was in Russia only to transit further when the US revoced his passport which effectively stranded him in Russia. So he is only in Russia due to the US government.

    5. Re:I don't know who's spying who by eaglesrule · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Snowden is a hero. He proved without a doubt we were being lied to.

      There is plenty documenting the events leading up to his residing in Russia, including the timing of his passport being revoked, so perhaps you should rethink that. Do you really believe that bravery means waiving your right to a fair trial and letting yourself be shipped off to a CIA blacksite to be tortured?

  2. Any AV vendor by xxxJonBoyxxx · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Part of the reason I've always felt nervous installing AV or anything else that wanted to run at or near kernel is exactly this: at least one third party is "in" my system...and if that third party goes sideways then the rest of my defenses aren't worth much. (e.g. is your IDS really going to flag a 10% traffic increase to your AV vendor from your AV software?)

    1. Re:Any AV vendor by houghi · · Score: 5, Funny

      The chances of there being two ticketing bombs on a plane are astronomical small, so I always take one with me, so we are all more secure.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
  3. Inb4 Russian apologists by Sarcasmooo! · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Here's an old story you might find apolitically interesting. We knew way before the election that Kaspersky was KGB trained and a Putin loyalist. You can read my comment history of you're an actual skeptic rather than a Russian botnik. But I also recommend anyone who doubts Putin's viciousness to hear the story of how he murdered his way into office from this PBS Documentary.

    As a sidenote, I'm a slashdot reader from more than a decade ago, and I've been really disappointed to see the amount of denialism present on this issue. I remember this as a place for pragmatic, intelligent, realistic people. And here's the reality: Putin is at war with you, he doesn't give a shit about you or your family or even his own citizens' families, and he actively hopes that you are confused about what he is doing, or denying it entirely.

  4. Occam's Razor by chill · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Kaspersky's AV solutions scan files, and transmit data back to their servers if found to be malware. If nothing else, they can send back lists of files on machines that are scanned, etc.

    The transmission is done thru TLS-encrypted channels.

    The Russian Government, like most major governments, do their best to monitor all of the traffic they can. See the recent Wikileaks documents on "Peter-Service" for some details.

    If the Russian gov't has obtained, one way or another, copies of Kaspersky's TLS keys, then they really don't need cooperation to see everything that's coming down the pipe. They can also probably MITM the connection and take control of the AV application, without Kaspersky's knowledge.

    It is called "plausible deniability" for Kaspersky and fairly trivial in a country where the use of strong encryption requires a license from the gov't.

    There are numerous current news articles about our (American) Justice Department is salivating over the possibility of that being possible in the U.S.

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
  5. Well, then... by lhowaf · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I trust(ed) Kaspersky more than the Senators bad-mouthing them. They look pretty bad in this light, though. Not because of collusion with the KGB but because their software can't, apparently, protect their own systems. So who can we trust, then? Symantec? McAfee? Windows Defender? Please. It looks like we either have to swallow the fact we're going to be entertaining uninvited guests or we'll have to try to live without our security blankets. It isn't so bad for /. readers but what about those friends and family who are more-and-more at risk? What a stinkhole we've made of the Internet.

  6. No silver lining for Kaspersky by lbmouse · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No matter how you spin this there is no way for Kapersky to come out of this whole mess OK.

  7. Re:NPR advertising Kapersky this am by jellomizer · · Score: 5, Informative

    NPR does admit that Kapersky is an underwriter in their stories... They were also early to bring up the connection between them and the Russian government. It seems NPR is respectable enough to not let Kapersky money get in the way of good reporting.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  8. Re:NPR advertising Kapersky this am by Billly+Gates · · Score: 4, Funny

    I disagree.

    Only Briebart and Fox is unbiased if you ask any Trump supporter. If any news outlet talks about Russia it is a lie by the libtards and part of the fake news if it doesn't agree with their ideology.

  9. Re:NPR advertising Kapersky this am by rbrander · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This issue is not immune to the scientific method. Much of the approbation for Fox, and kudos for NPR, comes from the Knowledge Networks study almost 15 years ago:
    http://www.pipa.org/OnlineRepo...

    It IS possible for everybody to agree on a few simple facts, no really. Then you can survey news consumers for whether they are right on those really simple facts, and find which consumers have the best score. In this 2003 poll, you actually had the amazing stat that people who watched a lot of Fox had lower scores than the Fox fans who watched a little - a lot of watching actually subtracted from your factual knowledge. And NPR listeners had the highest score.

    This study should be repeated yearly, about multiple news stories, and the results should be common knowledge. News sources should be competing on whether their viewers get 80% of 90%, not whether they get 90% or 25%.

  10. Size != Power ... on the Net by rbrander · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Man, if you`re a nation of 350 million people who invented the Internet and have a larger security budget than the rest of the world put together, it must totally burn you to be hacked by a half-starved, half-drunk nation of 150 million.

    But not as much as being told about it by a nation of 8 million.

    Guys, we don`t agree with all your foreign adventurism and neo-colonialism, but if you`re going to run around the planet just making enemies hand-over-mailed-fist, you really need to up your cybersecurity game. You have WAY too many of your human IT resources trying to figure out how to out-snapchat SnapChat.

    And hire Snowden back. That guy could run a computer.

  11. Re:NPR advertising Kapersky this am by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You can tell lies by telling nothing but the truth.

    I don't think Fox News can... If they can, they aren't. They seem to resort to normal lying quite regularly.

    NPR is only slightly better but not much. It's nauseating to listen to them. What they report on and how they report on it is very one sided. Too much emotional manipulation. Too many loaded questions. Too many attempts for "gotcha moments" instead of understanding any position. Too many one sided arguments and token opponents. Too many fallacious arguments; strawmen and appeals are the norm.

    It doesn't seem like you are defending Fox, so I won't bother pointing out all the BS on their side. But I honestly don't see any of what you are talking about with NPR. Can you cite any of the stuff you are describing from NPR?

    If you think they are fair and balanced then perhaps you are already in an echo chamber. When I listen to them I don't feel like I am becoming better informed but rather learning talking points from a emotionally manipulative propagandist with an agenda.

    It's possible. But I think I would have to only consume NPR and sources like it to be really be in an echo chamber. And honestly I think the term "fair and balanced" is basically meaningless after Fox News claiming this as their slogan for so long. It means different things to different people. To some people, being fair and balanced means being equally critical of "both" sides of an argument regardless of merit or how many sides there even are.

    What I will say about NPR is that it is not often (I can't even remember the last time) when they reported something as fact that turned out to be false. Yes, the media can be deceptive with which facts they decide to report and which to omit. But omitting facts does not prevent those facts from being reported by other media outlets. What relevant facts did NPR omit? I haven't seen any.