![]() ![]() It said logs showed that the consumer version of Kaspersky’s popular product had been analyzing questionable software from a US computer and found a zip file that was flagged as malicious. In a statement, the company said it stumbled on the code a year earlier than the recent newspaper reports had it, in 2014. Though Kaspersky offered the sort of plausible explanation that some security experts had predicted, US officials who have been campaigning against Kaspersky’s use on sensitive computers are likely to point to the admission that the company took secret code that was not endangering its customer.
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