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[5] [b] Natalya, who pushed Eugene to start the company, was the CEO, while Eugene was the head of research. [1] The following year, the CIH virus (AKA the Chernobyl virus) created a boon for Kaspersky's anti-virus products, which Kaspersky said was the only software at the time that could cleanse the virus. [ 1 ]
Eugene Kaspersky, Russian information specialist and CEO of Kaspersky Lab (2015) [427] Leymah Gbowee, Liberian peace activist and Nobel Peace Prize laureate (2016) [428] Shirin Ebadi, Iranian lawyer, former judge and Nobel Peace Prize laureate (2016) [429] Syeda Ghulam Fatima, Pakistani human and labour rights activist (2016) [428]
The Institute of Cryptography, Telecommunications and Computer Science (Russian: Институт криптографии, связи и информатики) or IKSI (ИКСИ) is a research institute within the Academy of the Federal Security Service of Russia, which trains specialists in areas such as the transfer, protection and processing of information.
Eugene Kaspersky (Yevgeny Valentinovich Kaspersky) is a Russian cybersecurity expert and the CEO of Kaspersky Lab, an IT security company with 3,000 employees. He cofounded Kaspersky Lab in 1997 and helped identify instances of government-sponsored cyberwarfare as the head of research.
In 1997, Eugene Kaspersky, his wife Natalya Kaspersky, and Alexey De-Monderik left KAMI to form Kaspersky Lab, [27] [a] and to continue developing the antivirus product, then called AVP. [ 30 ] [ 31 ] The product was renamed Kaspersky Anti-Virus after an American company registered the AVP trademark in the US.
The idea of using sanctions against Kaspersky Labs or to Eugene Kaspersky directly were on hold for now. Should the United States Department of the Treasury be asked to sanction Kaspersky they would "block or freeze the assets of companies or individuals who are targeted and bar U.S. citizens from engaging in transactions with those companies ...
Kasperski (also spelled Kaspersky) is a family name of East European origin. Formed by adding a Slavic adjective-forming suffix -ski (masc., also spelled -skii, -skiy; fem. -ska (Polish etc.), -skaya(Rus.)) to the Western men's personal name Kasper/Casper. Kasperski or Kaspersky may refer to:
In order to avoid any confusion with antivirus creator Eugene Kaspersky, he spelled his penname differently in Russian. His penname "myschh" was chosen owing to the novel "Dune" which is a great favorite of his (Kris often used quotations from the novel, in particular, in his first book "Technique and philosophy of hacker attacks" [ 9 ] ).