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U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly. Credit: Diego M. Radzinschi/NLJ [/caption] A federal judge on Wednesday dismissed a Moscow-based company’s challenge to the Trump administration's governmentwide ban on its software, ruling that the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s move was justified to minimize cybersecurity vulnerabilities. “These defensive actions may very well have adverse consequences for some third parties. But that does not make them unconstitutional,” U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly in Washington said in her ruling. Kaspersky Lab, represented by Baker McKenzie, filed two lawsuits in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. The first challenged the Department of Homeland Security’s ban on the firm’s software. The second targeted a law passed by Congress that bolstered the government order to stop federal agencies from using “any hardware, software or services” from the company. When it ordered the ban, in September 2017, the DHS cited concerns about ties between Kaspersky officials and Russian intelligence. Kaspersky has denied having such ties, describing the allegations as “inflammatory” and inspired by anti-Russia hysteria. The company asked Kollar-Kotelly to declare the governmentwide software ban unconstitutional, arguing that it unfairly singled out the company as a “target for legislative punishment.” Kollar-Kotelly rejected that claim, saying the law passed by Congress “does not inflict ‘punishment’ on Kaspersky Lab.” Rather, the judge wrote, “it eliminates a perceived risk to the nation’s cybersecurity and, in so doing, has the secondary effect of foreclosing one small source of revenue for a large multinational corporation.” Ryan Fayhee, a partner at Hughes Hubbard & Reed who left Baker McKenzie in May, was not immediately reached for comment. In the separate challenge to the ban ordered by DHS, Kollar-Kotelly found that Kaspersky lacked standing. Even if she ruled in favor of Kaspersky in that challenge, she wrote, the law backing up that ban “would remain on the books, preventing any federal government agency from purchasing Kaspersky Lab products.” Kollar-Kotelly noted that the law does not take effect until October but said that, in response to the DHS order, government agencies have likely already removed Kaspersky Lab products from their systems. “Under these circumstances, it is completely implausible that any government entity would purchase a Kaspersky Lab product before October 1st,” she wrote. Here's the full ruling against Kaspersky Lab: [falcon-embed src="embed_1"] Read more:Ex-Sanctions Official Jumps to Hughes Hubbard as Trump Vows New RestrictionsRussian Cyber Firm, in New Suit, Calls US Ban 'Legislative Punishment'