News

This momentum, combined with unique government infrastructure and contracting requirements, led the first industry-specific ...
Deep cuts in federal cybersecurity spending risk creating ripple effects that will put many organizations at a higher risk of ...
A top official at the Food and Drug Administration recently overruled government scientists on the availability of two ...
A Tiverton-based engineer has been lending his support to a grassroots campaign in Sierra Leone as the country grapples with ...
The United States has blacklisted a Russia-based bulletproof hosting services provider, two affiliated companies and four of ...
The Treasury Department alleges that Russia-based Aeza Group is selling web hosting services to cybercriminals, who use it to ...
Beyond China, the last administration also banned the Russian antivirus provider Kaspersky—another example of how the government is using national security authorities in the tech supply chain. Stuck ...
The Department of Home Affairs in May 2024 found “critical infrastructure and state agencies” had been exposed to products ...
Kaspersky antivirus and security software will no longer be permitted on Australian government devices, with the nation's government citing national security concerns as being behind the ban.
But not everyone in the U.S. has given up on the Russian-made antivirus. Some Americans have found ways to get around the ban and are still using Kaspersky’s antivirus, TechCrunch has learned.
Not everyone in the U.S. has given up on the Russian-made antivirus. Some Americans have found ways to get around the ban and are still using Kaspersky’s antivirus.