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The first line of the article:

> The Kremlin hacked our presidential election

Stopped reading at this point.

it did hack the election although still your moronic president would have won
I am not sure what's more deplorable here. Your use of foul language or the foul language seeming to me as something used appropriately?
> Stopped reading at this point.

It's scary to challenge your beliefs isn't it

No, it's useless to read an article which starts with a blatant lie.
I hope you're referring to the common use of the word "hacked" instead of "influenced" as a lie, rather than the underlying fact that Russia influenced the US elections in a variety of ways, and continues to influence through various means?
> I hope you're referring to the common use of the word "hacked" instead of "influenced"

Yes. It's the lie. "Hacking" and "influencing" are completely different things. The first implies that election system was compromised, and, in the mind of 99.999% of common population, that election results were directly tampered with. Nothing of the sort happened.

Not yet proven, but there are a remarkable number of people around Trump with ties to shady Russian businessmen.

It may not have been a direct hack of the election either, more the use of Russian intelligence bot operations running an extremely effective social media campaign.

> Russian intelligence bot operations running an extremely effective social media campaign.

So a hack.

Any accusation is "not yet proven". There can be only two states of any accusation: "not yet proven" and "proven". The one about hacking the election has never been the latter, and never will be. I think there's a time where you have to give up on "not yet" and accept the reality. For some people it takes years or decades or never, of course.

> there are a remarkable number of people around Trump with ties to shady Russian businessmen

There are remarkable number of people around anything in US politics with "ties to shady Russian businessmen". Ever heard, for example, of Podesta Group? Google who they are and who were among their clients. Check out who of the former presidents spoke at Russian Renaissance Capital bank for $500K. Hint: his initials are WJC.

The reason is simple - Russian oligarchy has tons of money and interests in the USA. So there would be a lot of people willing to take that money and be around people with influence to prove that they deserve that money.

That, however, has zero relation to "not yet proven" claim that somebody "hacked election". Because it... Did. Not. Happen.

> It may not have been a direct hack of the election either, more the use of Russian intelligence bot operations running an extremely effective social media campaign.

In other words, not a hack at all. Otherwise any troll band from 4chan is "hacking elections".

Thanks. I agree. Despite all the rhetoric, "hacking" the election has specific connotations and none have been proven.

Russia might have aided in smearing another unfit candidate in the court of public opinion - and that's social engineering not hacking. Social engineering which the US political parties (and indeed most democracies) are built on.

What does that even mean? I mean, in specific terms, they did what, actually?
I won't be holding my breath for anybody to specify.
Imagine the public reaction in the US if the Russian say "Windows might be a threat to the national security".
But Windows IS a threat to national security.
It isn't. Not from the perspective being given.

This isn't about "can a company cripple the government", its about "can a FOREIGN company cripple the government".

So the US is safe with MS at the helm and Russia is safe with Kaspersky at the helm; but not with each other's software.

And frankly after dismissing my own knee jerk reaction, I agree. Yes it's ridiculous we're at the point where we can't trust non-free software and most modern hardware - but that's where we are. Bring on the 2100's.

I think that's exactly the point being made - Windows is a threat to Russia's national security.

Or did I misread the parent?

Not just Windows.

There have been government sanctioned backdoors in many softwares and hardwares coming out of American companies. This is known.

Intercept sites for Cisco equipment (this was 7 years ago at least, maybe they're inside Cisco now). Backdoors in Windows- not to mention backdoors in CPUS (Intel ME, AMD PSP)

We have a history of ill-will regarding the US government interfering with US technology companies, we should by all accounts consider them hostile.

What's worse is that the USA has a monopoly on most technology (x86 CPU, search, mail etc;)

They do say that, rightly so from their point of view, and are somehow working on alternatives.
"may be". Or may be not. We don't know for sure yet but we sure want more clicks.
This is an op-ed by a senator published by the NYT. I think the title adequately reflects the core message.
Everything the Soviet party told the people about the Soviet Union was a lie.

Unfortunately everything they said about the United States was true.

Things aren't changing.

When I (Russian-Canadian immigrant) visit my family back in Russia they will spout endless bullshit about how Ukraine shot down that airliner to make Russia look bad, how the Ukrainian government is fascist and represses the ethnic Russians, how the US helped the Syrian rebels fake a gas attack and blame Assad, and so on. And I can argue and bring up counterpoints, but they just shake their heads and say I'm a naive fool for believing the "Western propaganda".

But they'll also point to articles like this and ask "What exactly can the FSB do that the FBI/CIA/NSA could not and have been PROVEN to be doing with Google/Windows/etc? Should we stop using all American software because the FBI/NSA may intercept the information/data without a warrant?"

And I have to agree with them saying, yes, the US Government is deeply myopic and hypocritical.

"Unfortunately everything they said about the United States was true": more like, they mixed some truths with lots of lies and exaggerations.
The opening line has a Red Scare feel to it, and sure enough the author is a Democratic senator.

Still you'd be stupid to believe Kaspersky Lab doesn't have ties to the Russian state.

They can be forced by the nation they are in to work against other nations - something I feel like the US pioneered and continues to push. It isn't nice but it does have a beautiful feeling of karma to it.
More like: "National security software is a threat to national security. Oh yeah, and also Kaspersky."
In Putin's Russia no big company can afford to not be close to Putin. Those who aren't get bought out or simply dispossessed (just look at VKontakte, Yukos and many other ones).

This might sound like "red scare", but, just like I would never use Google Mail if I were working for the Russian government, I would never use Kaspersky software if I was working for the US (or any other NATO) government.

This is true (or partially true) for many states.

Turkey might already be there and a country in Asia is inching closer to it (no, I don't mean China).

Having backdoor in CPU is more dangerous threat than random software i can uninstall. When will they cover that story?
I don't get this. Or at least I am quite uncomfortable with the narrative.

The points being made in the article is that there was an "unequivocal no" from six top US intelligence officials when asked whether they would be comfortable with Kaspersky Lab software on their computers. And that these claims somehow translate into that it is a fact, the author even uses the term "beyond the evidence".

There is no evidence being presented in the article. At all. Although if the statement would be that it would pose an increased and unwanted risk for US agencies to use software developed in Russia, then yes, I would not object. The same applies in reverse, for Russia, or any other state for that matter, to use Microsoft/Apple/Google software in critical applications.

The author also claims that "oligarchs and tycoons have no choice but to cooperate with the Kremlin". But as I understand it (I am not a US citizen) the US government has the same capabilities when it comes to US based companies? I specifically remember the Lavabit debacle. Or does the author insinuate that there is some additional pressure (threat) on Russian companies to comply?

There are more legal protections in US than in Russia, but ultimately if FBI wants the company badly and can get either drugs or National Security in the picture, the company is toast. Well, maybe not if the company is Google or Apple, but otherwise yeah.
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I think it's high time that companies seriously considering using linux as their default OS. It has come a long way and it would be really easy to standardize a distribution based on hardware requirements.

I'm not arguing that linux is immune from backdoors and the like, but a comprehensive security audit for all new software could potentially be done.

I'm more than ready for this Russian hacking sensationalism to wind down. This is a conspiracy theory that's approaching the same level of ridiculousness as the one surrounding Obama's birth certificate; we have this entirely unfounded claim that two unidentified, unfathomably sophisticated attackers have somehow been positively linked to the FSB through unspecified, "magic" means, and that the usage generic tools/software originated in and used throughout Eastern Europe is somehow concrete "proof" of this. I could also posit that the Russian interference was orchestrated by Vince McMahon, and it's been him all along. Until intelligence agencies present an actual smoking gun, all we have is a lot of smoke and mirrors.

I would be fine with the nutters carrying on with this conspiracy theory (more concern for national security and voter verification is not a bad thing, although these same nutters are generally only advocates for these things when Trump is involved), but blind "Red Scare" type FUD is not the right approach. Kaspersky has offered complete access to the source code of its products for use in a clean build process controlled by the US government. This is not a winning strategy if your company's endgame is to infiltrate US government systems.

OK, so the article claims Kaspersky developed software that FSB uses and helped them to do whatever they do. Now, how evil is that?

Well, I may have developed software that FSB uses too. I don't know for sure, but I participated in a number of widely used open source projects, and given how big FSB is, it's not impossible somebody somewhere there uses one of them. Thus, I apparently am kinda Russian spy?

Also, Kaspersky cooperated with FSB in their enforcement activities. Nothing US security company would ever do, I mean cooperating with law enforcement? Are you kidding me?! OK, FSB is not you common law enforcement. Probably not all of these activities are what we'd call good, and some of them what we'd call pure evil. But using somebody's technical expertise does not automatically make all products by that company somehow insecure. If they specifically did the evil stuff - yes, maybe - but then dig up which stuff they did and show the specifics! So far the only specific activity mentioned was fighting DDoSers, which is not exactly evil.[1]

I mean, maybe Kaspersky is a Kremlin puppet. Or maybe not. I have no slightest idea. Maybe it's a good idea not to use software from the company which is in a total grasp (as any company in Russia) of a large geopolitical foe for critical infrastructure. Certainly sounds like a good idea. But this article spends so much text on not adding anything to this obvious idea but vague innuendo and describing common things in menacing tone. Very common to the general journalistic treatment of the Red Scare 2.0 we're observing right now and it gets more tiresome by the day. I'm not even defending Kaspersky here, I am defending minimal standards in reporting tech stuff.

[1] https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-07-11/kaspersky...