Starting Thursday, Russian cybersecurity company Kaspersky deleted its anti-malware software from customers’ computers across the United States and automatically replaced it with UltraAV’s antivirus solution.

  • Matengor
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    4822 hours ago

    “I woke up and saw this new antivirus system on my desktop and I tried opening kaspersky but it was gone. So I had to look up what happened because I was literally having a mini heart attack that my desktop somehow had a virus which uninstalled kaspersky somehow,” one user said.

    To make things worse, while some users could uninstall UltraAV using the software’s uninstaller, those who tried removing it using uninstall apps saw it reinstalled after a reboot, causing further concerns about a potential malware infection.

    Oh my!

    • @SupraMario
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      613 hours ago

      That they thought Kaspersky wasnt malware…

  • @[email protected]
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    2121 hours ago

    Great way to prove the US right that your software is untrustworthy… could’ve just shut up and complied instead of installing crap with no notice on people’s systems.

    • @takeda
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      2521 hours ago

      Notice that UltraAV belongs to UltraVPN, company that looks like it’s under Chinese control (despite ban on VPNs they are suspiciously allowed to operate there)

      UltraAV is basically non-existent outside of this news, so it likely is Kaspersky in new skin too bypass federal regulation.

  • Zier
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    1020 hours ago

    My Kaspersky uninstalled, and reinstalled LINUX!