Kaspersky has removed its antivirus software from computers across the country and replaced itself with UltraAV, a different antivirus product from a different company. The change is part of ...
Not everyone in the U.S. has given up on the Russian-made antivirus. Some Americans have found ways to get around the ban and are still using Kaspersky’s antivirus.
Kaspersky forcibly uninstalled and replaced itself with a new antivirus called UltraAV on the computers of around a million Americans. Many were surprised and aghast that they were not asked to ...
A spokesperson for Pango, the cybersecurity company that owns UltraAV, defended the automatic migration, which in practice meant roughly a million U.S. Kaspersky customers became UltraAV customers ...
Customers of Kaspersky antivirus in the United States found out in the last few days that their cybersecurity software was automatically replaced with a new one called UltraAV, according to several ...
Some Kaspersky customers were surprised to see that the transition meant that Kaspersky forced-uninstalled itself from their Windows computers, and instead replaced the software with UltraAV ...
Security software provider Kaspersky, which will soon be banned from selling or providing its services in the United States, promised a smooth transition for current customers. However ...
At the end of September, Kaspersky forcibly uninstalled and replaced itself with a new antivirus called UltraAV on the computers of around a million Americans, many of whom were surprised and ...