Security

CSO

Uncle Sam sanctions Kaspersky's top bosses – but not Mr K himself

Here's America's list of the supposedly dirty dozen


Uncle Sam took another swing at Kaspersky Lab today and sanctioned a dozen C-suite and senior-level executives at the antivirus maker, but spared CEO and co-founder Eugene Kaspersky.

The move prevents US persons and organizations from doing business with the designated individuals. Any non-US financial institution that works with them also risks sanctions under Executive Order 13873.

The US Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) cited national security threats in designating the 12 individuals as under sanction. In making the announcement, it also noted: "OFAC has not designated Kaspersky Lab, its parent or subsidiary companies, or its CEO."

The Treasury did, however, designate just about every other exec who reports directly to the Moscow-based firm's chief exec "for operating in the technology sector of the Russian Federation economy," which under EO 14024 is a no-no.

It follows Thursday's actions by the Commerce Department that prohibit Kaspersky Lab Inc from providing its software and other security services in America from July 20 — plus years of directives and mandates to kick Kaspersky products out of US government networks.

Kaspersky Lab's operations in Russia and the UK were also on Thursday placed on the US government's Entity List, making it difficult to impossible for US persons and organizations to do business with them. In short, there is a mix of action against Kaspersky, from a ban on sales in the United States to sanctions against its execs in Russia.

In issuing these sanctions and product bans, the Biden White House and previous administrations have argued that the Russia-based antivirus developer could be forced or ordered by Putin to backdoor its products and hand over American individuals and organizations' sensitive information from their PCs to Kremlin intelligence.

The Treasury sanctions followed a similar narrative.

"Today's action against the leadership of Kaspersky Lab underscores our commitment to ensure the integrity of our cyber domain and to protect our citizens against malicious cyber threats," said Under Secretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence Brian E. Nelson in a statement.

The 12 individuals named by the US government are: 

Kaspersky Lab declined to comment on the matter. ®

Send us news
17 Comments

US indicts duo over alleged Swatting spree that targeted elected officials

Apparently made over 100 fake crime reports and bomb threats

FCC finally gets around to banning Kaspersky from telecoms kit

Communications agency now passing on the order to operators

Microsoft hosts a security summit but no press, public allowed

CrowdStrike, other vendors, friendly govt reps…but not anyone who would tell you what happened

Security biz Verkada to pay $3M penalty under deal that also enforces infosec upgrade

Allowed access to 150K cameras, some in sensitive spots, but has been done for spamming

Security boom is over, with over a third of CISOs reporting flat or falling budgets

Good news? Security is still getting a growing part of IT budget

Alleged Karakut ransomware scumbag charged in US

Plus: Microsoft issues workaround for dual-boot crashes; ARRL cops to ransom payment, and more

White House thinks it's time to fix the insecure glue of the internet: Yup, BGP

Better late than never

CrowdStrike's meltdown didn't dent its market dominance … yet

Total revenue for Q2 grew 32 percent

Volt Typhoon suspected of exploiting Versa SD-WAN bug since June

The same Beijing-backed cyber spy crew the feds say burrowed into US critical infrastructure

Microsoft security tools questioned for treating employees as threats

Cracked Labs examines how workplace surveillance turns workers into suspects

Watchdog warns FBI is sloppy on secure data storage and destruction

National security data up for grabs, Office of the Inspector General finds

Iran's Pioneer Kitten hits US networks via buggy Check Point, Palo Alto gear

The government-backed crew also enjoys ransomware as a side hustle