Science

U.S. House of Representatives sets new hearing on Kaspersky Lab software

The U.S. House Committee on Science, Space and Technology announced the hearing a day after media reported a Russian government-backed hack of NSA secrets through a contractor who sources said had Kaspersky software installed on his laptop.

Announcement comes a day after media reported a Russian government-backed hack of NSA secrets

An employee of Kaspersky Lab works on computers at the company's headquarters in Moscow, Russia. On Friday, the U.S. House Committee on Science, Space and Technology announced a hearing into Kaspersky Lab software amid new allegations that the Kremlin could use its products to conduct espionage. (Pavel Golovkin/Associated Press)

A U.S. House of Representatives committee said on Friday that it has scheduled a new hearing on Kaspersky Lab software on Oct. 25, as lawmakers review accusations that the Kremlin could use its products to conduct espionage.

Kaspersky Lab has strongly denied those allegations, which last month prompted the Trump administration to order civilian government agencies to purge the software from its networks. The company has agreed to send Chief Executive Eugene Kaspersky to Washington to testify before Congress.

The House Committee on Science, Space and Technology announced the hearing a day after two media outlets —The Wall Street Journal and the Washington Post — reported that Russian government-backed hackers stole highly classified U.S. cyber secrets in 2015 from a National Security Agency (NSA) contractor who had Kaspersky software installed on his laptop.

Reuters was not able to independently verify those reports. 

The House science committee did not say who would be called to testify at the Oct. 25 hearing.

Eugene Kaspersky last month told Reuters that the committee had invited him to testify at a Sept. 27 hearing and that he would attend if he could get an expedited visa to enter the United States.

That hearing was later cancelled, though the committee held a closed-door classified session on Kaspersky software on Sept. 26.

Kaspersky head says he hopes to address U.S. concerns

Eugene Kaspersky said in a statement on Friday that he hoped to attend the hearing.

"I look forward to participating in the hearing once it's rescheduled and having the opportunity to address the committee's concerns directly," he said.

An appearance before Congress would mark Kaspersky's most high-profile attempt to dispel long-standing accusations that his firm may be conducting espionage on behalf of the Russian government.

The investigation into the 2015 NSA hack is focused on somebody who worked at the agency's Tailored Access Operations unit, a unit that uses computer hacking to gather intelligence, according to two people familiar with the classified probe.

Kaspersky anti-virus software was running on the contractor's laptop at the time of the hack, and investigators are looking into whether hackers used the software to breach the computer and steal the data, said one of those sources.

In a statement responding to the Wall Street Journal story on Thursday, Kaspersky said, "As a private company, Kaspersky Lab does not have inappropriate ties to any government, including Russia, and the only conclusion seems to be that Kaspersky Lab is caught in the middle of a geopolitical fight."

With files from CBC News