McAfee
McAfee, Inc.
|
Type |
Wholly owned subsidiary |
Industry |
Computer software
Computer security |
Fate |
Acquired by Intel |
Founded |
1987[1] |
Founder(s) |
John McAfee |
Headquarters |
2821 Mission College Blvd.[2]Santa Clara, California, United States |
Area served |
Worldwide |
Key people |
Charles Robel
(Chairman)
David DeWalt
(President & CEO) |
Products |
Data Protection, Database Security, Email & Web Security, Endpoint Protection, Mobile Security, Network Security, Risk & Compliance, Security-as-a-Service (Security SaaS), Security Management |
Parent |
Intel Corporation |
Website |
www.mcafee.com |
McAfee, Inc. ( /ˈmækəfiː/)[3] is a computer security company headquartered in Santa Clara, California, USA. It markets software and services to home users, businesses and the public sector. On August 19, 2010, electronics company Intel agreed to purchase McAfee for $7.68 billion (£5 billion).[4] The acquisition closed on February 28, 2011.[5]
History
The company was founded in 1989 as McAfee Associates, named for its founder John McAfee. McAfee was incorporated in the state of Delaware in 1992. Network Associates was formed in 1997 as a merger of McAfee Associates and Network General. In 2004, a major restructuring occurred. In the spring, the company sold its Magic Solutions business to Remedy, a subsidiary of BMC Software. In the summer of 2004, the company sold the Sniffer Technologies business to a venture capital backed firm named 'Network General' - the same name as the original owner of Sniffer Technologies. Also, the company changed its name back to McAfee to reflect its focus on security-related technologies.
Among other companies bought and sold by McAfee (formerly known as Network Associates) is Trusted Information Systems, which developed the Firewall Toolkit, which was the free software foundation for the commercial Gauntlet Firewall, which was later sold by McAfee to Secure Computing Corporation. Network Associates, as a result of brief ownership of TIS Labs/NAI Labs/Network Associates Laboratories/McAfee Research, was highly influential in the world of Open Source software, as that organization produced portions of the Linux, FreeBSD, and Darwin operating systems, and developed portions of the BIND name server software and SNMP version 3.
Leading up to the TIS Labs acquisition, McAfee had acquired Calgary, Alberta, Canada-based FSA Corporation, which helped the company diversify its security offerings away from just client-based antivirus software by bringing on board its own network and desktop encryption technologies. The FSA team also oversaw the creation of a number of other technologies that were leading edge at the time, including firewall, file encryption, and public key infrastructure product lines. While those product lines had their own individual successes including PowerBroker (written by Dean Huxley and Dan Freedman and now sold by BeyondTrust), the growth of antivirus ware always outpaced the growth of the other security product lines. It is fair to say that the company remains best known for its antivirus and antispam product lines.
On June 9, 1998 Network Associates agreed to acquire Dr Solomon's Group PLC, the leading European manufacturer of antivirus software, for $642 million in stock.
On April 2, 2003, McAfee acquired IntruVert Networks for $100 million. According to Network World, "IntruVert's technology focus is on intrusion-prevention, which entails not just detecting attacks, but blocking them. The IntruVert product line can be used as a passive intrusion-detection system, just watching and reporting, or it can be used in the intrusion-prevention mode of blocking a perceived attack."[6]
On January 4, 2006, the Securities and Exchange Commission filed suit against McAfee for overstating its 1998–2000 net revenue by $622 million.[7] Without admitting any wrongdoing, McAfee simultaneously settled the complaint, and agreed to pay a $50 million penalty and rework its accounting practices.[8]
On April 5, 2006, McAfee bought out SiteAdvisor for a reputed $70 million[9] in competition with Symantec, a service that warns users if downloading software or filling out forms on a site may obtain malware or spam. In January 2006, McAfee agreed to pay a fine of US$50 million to the SEC for accounting fraud known as channel stuffing that served to inflate their revenue to their investors.[8]
In October 2006 McAfee fired their president Kevin Weiss,[10] and their CEO George Samaneuk resigned under the cloud of a recent SEC investigation which also caused the departure of Kent Roberts, the General Counsel, earlier in the year. In late December 2006 both Weiss and Samaneuk had share option grant prices revised upwards by McAfee's board. Weiss and Roberts were both exonerated of all wrongdoing from the claims of McAfee in 2009.
In January 2007 under pressure from ex-employees world wide, several of which backed a class action in the United States, McAfee agreed to honor share options granted, but which are unable to be exercised due to the self-imposed blackout on employee options dealing.
On November 19, 2007, McAfee agreed to purchase SafeBoot for $350 million.[11] SafeBoot was at the time one of the leading providers of encryption software to protect information stored on laptops, PDA's, etc. from exposure if the device was lost.
On September 22, 2008, McAfee announced its intention to acquire Secure Computing. The combined company will form the world's largest dedicated security company.
On March 17, 2010, McAfee launched Cloud Secure program, a new service for Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) providers to add additional security to their cloud deployments.The new program includes cloud security certification services that are provided on an annual basis and will include existing security controls, processes and certifications, as well as future cloud security standards; and automatic and daily security audits, remediation of vulnerabilities and reporting of the security status of their service and network using the McAfee Cloud Secure service.[12]
On April 21, 2010, beginning at approximately 14:00 UTC, millions of computers worldwide running Windows XP Service Pack 3 were affected by an erroneous virus definition file update by McAfee, resulting in the removal of a Windows system file (svchost.exe) on those machines, causing machines to lose network access and, in some cases, enter a reboot loop. Mcafee rectified this by removing and replacing the faulty DAT file, version 5958, with an emergency DAT file, version 5959 and has posted a fix for the affected machines in their consumer knowledge base.[13][14] The University of Michigan's medical school reported that 8,000 of its 25,000 computers crashed. Police in Lexington, Ky., resorted to hand-writing reports and turned off their patrol car terminals as a precaution. Some jails canceled visitation, and Rhode Island hospitals turned away non-trauma patients at emergency rooms and postponed some elective surgeries.[15] Australian supermarket behemoth Coles reported that 10 percent (1,100) of its point-of-sales terminals were affected and was forced to shut down stores in both western and southern parts of the country.[16]
As a result of the outage, McAfee implemented additional QA protocols for any releases that directly impacted critical system files. The company also rolled out additional capabilities in Artemis that provide another level of protection against false positives by leveraging a whitelist of hands-off system files.[17]
On August 19, 2010, Intel announced that it would buy McAfee for $48 a share in a deal valued at $7.68 billion.[18]
Naming rights
McAfee formerly had naming rights to the then-named McAfee Coliseum, home of the Oakland Athletics baseball team in Oakland, California from 2004–2008.
Mergers and Acquisitions
- NitroSecurity Acquisition
- On October 4, 2011, McAfee announced its intention to acquire privately owned NitroSecurity,[19] NitroSecurity develops high-performance security information and event management (SIEM) solutions that protect critical information and infrastructure. NitroSecurity solutions reduce risk exposure and increase network and information availability by removing the scalability and performance limitations of security information management. The acquisition closed on November 30, 2011.
- Sentrigo Acquisition
- On March 23, 2011, McAfee announced its intention to acquire privately owned Sentrigo,[20] a leading provider of database security, including vulnerability management, database activity monitoring, database audit, and virtual patching — which ensure databases are protected without impacting performance or availability. The acquisition enables McAfee to extend its database security portfolio and deliver comprehensive, industry-leading solutions to serve the rapidly growing database security market, estimated to reach more than $600 million by 2012. The acquisition closed on April 6, 2011.[21]
- tenCube Acquisition
- On July 29, 2010, McAfee announced a definitive agreement to acquire tenCube, a privately-held online security company that specialized in anti-theft and data security for mobile devices.[22] The acquisition allowed McAfee to complete its diversification into the mobile security space, and announce its plans to build the next generation mobile platform. The acquisition closed on August 25, 2010.
- Trust Digital Acquisition
- On May 25, 2010, McAfee announced a definitive agreement to acquire Trust Digital, a privately-held online security company that specialized in security for mobile devices. The acquisition allowed McAfee to extend its services beyond traditional endpoint security and move into the mobile security market.[23] The acquisition closed on June 3, 2010.[24] The price for Trust Digital was not disclosed[25]
- MX Logic Acquisition
- On July 30, 2009, McAfee announced plans to acquire managed email and web security vendor MX Logic. The acquisition provided an enhanced range of SaaS-based security services such as cloud-based intelligence, web security, email security, endpoint security and vulnerability assessment.[26] The deal closed on September 1, 2009 at a price of $140 million.[27] MX Logic staff has been integrated into McAfee's SaaS business unit.
- Solidcore Systems Acquisition
- On May 15, 2009, McAfee announced its intention acquire Solidcore Systems, a privately-held security company, for $33 million.[28] Solidcore was a maker of software that helped companies protect ATMs and other specialized computers. The acquisition integrated Solidcore's whitelisting and compliance enforcement mechanisms into the McAfee product line.[29] The deal closed on June 1, 2009.
- Endeavor Acquisition
- In January 2009, McAfee announced plans to acquire Endeavor Security, a privately-held maker of IPS/IDS technology.[30] The deal closed in February 2009 for a total purchase price of $3.2 million.
- Secure Computing Acquisition
- On September 22, 2008, McAfee announced an agreement to acquire Secure Computing, a company specializing in network security hardware, services, and software products. The acquisition expanded McAfee's business in securing networks and cloud computing services to offer a more comprehensive brand of products. The deal closed on November 19, 2008 at a price of $497 million.[31]
- Reconnex Acquisition
- On July 31, 2008, McAfee announced it would acquire Reconnex, a maker of data protection appliances and software. Reconnex sold data loss prevention software, designed to prevent sensitive documents and data from leaving corporate networks.[32] The acquisition added content awareness to McAfee's data security portfolio.[33] The $46 million deal closed on August 12, 2008.
- ScanAlert Acquisition
- On October 30, 2007, McAfee announced plans to acquire ScanAlert for $51 million. The acquisition integrated ScanAlert's Hacker Safe service and McAfee's SiteAdvisor rating system to attack website security from both sides.[34] It was the industry's first service to help consumers stay safe as they searched, surfed and shopped. The deal closed on February 7, 2008.[35]
- SafeBoot Holding B.V. Acquisition
- On October 8, 2007, McAfee announced it would acquire SafeBoot Holding B.V. for $350 million.[36] SafeBoot provided mobile data security solutions that protected data, devices, and networks against the risk associated with loss, theft, and unauthorized access. Through the acquisition, McAfee became the only vendor to deliver endpoint, network, web, email and data security, as well as risk and compliance solutions. Gerhard Watzinger, CEO of SafeBoot, joined McAfee to lead the Data Protection product business unit.[37] The deal closed on November 19, 2007.
- Onigma Ltd Acquisition
- On October 16, 2006, McAfee announced it would acquire Israel based Onigma Ltd for $20 million.[38] Onigma provides host-based data leakage protection software that prevents intentional and unintentional leakage of sensitive data by internal users.
References
|
Companies portal |
|
San Francisco Bay Area portal |
|
Computer security portal |
- ^ http://home.mcafee.com/Root/AboutUs.aspx
- ^ McAfee - Contact US
- ^ Taschler, Scott (1 September 2010). "Quick Tips: How Do You Pronounce McAfee". McAfee, Inc.. http://link.brightcove.com/services/player/bcpid65694806001?bctid=45365945001&iframe=true&width=700&height=410.
- ^ "Intel in $7.68bn McAfee takeover". BBC News. 19 August 2010. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-11025866.
- ^ "Intel Completes Acquisition of McAfee". McAfee News. 28 February 2011. http://investor.mcafee.com/releasedetail.cfm?ReleaseID=553305.
- ^ Messmer, Ellen (2003-04-02). "Network Associates to buy IntruVert for $100 million". Network World. http://www.networkworld.com/news/2003/0402intru.html. Retrieved 2010-04-22.
- ^ Overstated Profits
- ^ a b "SEC Charges McAfee, Inc. with Accounting Fraud; McAfee Agrees to Settle and Pay a $50 Million Penalty; Press Release No. 2006-3". Securities and Exchange Commission. January 4, 2006. http://www.sec.gov/news/press/2006-3.htm. Retrieved 2009-04-01.
- ^ McMillan, Robert (2006-06-19). "McAfee sets e-commerce boost for SiteAdvisor". Network World. http://www.networkworld.com/news/2006/061906-mcafee-siteadvisor.html. Retrieved 2010-04-22.
- ^ Mills, Elinor (2009-08-21). "McAfee seeks gag on exec ousted over options". CNET News. http://news.cnet.com/8301-27080_3-10315368-245.html. Retrieved 2020-04-22.
- ^ "McAfee, Inc. to Acquire SafeBoot B.V. for $350 Million". 2007-10-08. http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/mcafee-inc-to-acquire-safeboot-bv-for-350-million-58474722.html.
- ^ "McAfee launches Cloud Secure program". 17 March 2010. http://www.newstatesman.com/technology/2010/03/cloud-security-mcafee-service. Retrieved 19 March 2010.
- ^ "McAfee DAT 5958 Update Issues". 21 April 2010. http://isc.sans.org/diary.html?storyid=8656. Retrieved 22 April 2010.
- ^ "Botched McAfee update shutting down corporate XP machines worldwide". 21 April 2010. http://www.engadget.com/2010/04/21/mcafee-update--shutting-down-xp-machines/. Retrieved 22 April 2010.
- ^ "Buggy McAfee update whacks Windows XP PCs". April 21, 2010. http://news.cnet.com/8301-1009_3-20003074-83.html.
- ^ "McAfee bug forces Aussie store closures". April 22, 2010. http://news.cnet.com/8301-1009_3-20003161-83.html.
- ^ "McAfee apologizes for crippling PCs with bad update". April 23, 2010. http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9175940/McAfee_apologizes_for_crippling_PCs_with_bad_update.
- ^ "Intel to Acquire McAfee". Intel Corporation. 2010-08-19. http://newsroom.intel.com/community/intel_newsroom/blog/2010/08/19/intel-to-acquire-mcafee. Retrieved 2010-08-19.
- ^ http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Security/McAfee-Buys-SIEM-Provider-Nitro-Security-833837/
- ^ http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20110323005514/en/McAfee-Acquire-Sentrigo-Enhance-Database-Security-Portfolio
- ^ http://www.mcafee.com/us/about/mcafee-sentrigo.aspx
- ^ http://newsroom.mcafee.com/article_display.cfm?article_id=3671
- ^ Glass, Kathryn. "McAfee to Acquire Trust Digital, Foray Into Mobile Security." Fox Business, 25 May 2010. <http://www.foxbusiness.com/story/markets/industries/technology/mcafee-acquire-trust-digital-foray-mobile-security/>
- ^ McAfee, Inc. "Announces Support and Powerful Mobile Device Capabilities for Devices Running iOS 4." Market Watch. The Wall Street Journal Digital Network, 1 July 2010. <http://www.marketwatch.com/story/mcafee-inc-announces-support-and-powerful-mobile-device-capabilities-for-devices-running-ios-4-2010-07-01>
- ^ Messmer, Ellen. "McAfee buys smartphone security firm Trust Digital." TechWorld, 26 May 2010. <http://news.techworld.com/security/3224757/mcafee-buys-smartphone-security-firm-trust-digital/?olo=rss>
- ^ "McAfee adds MX Logic to its Global Threat Intelligence portfolio." InfoSecurity. 31 July 2009. <http://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/view/2951/mcafee-adds-mx-logic-to-its-global-threat-intelligence-portfolio/>
- ^ "McAfee, Inc. Completes Acquisition of MX Logic" WestconGroup. 10 September 2009. <http://www.westcon.com.au/en/news-and-events/news/2009/9/10/mcafee-inc-completes-acquisition-of-mx-logic.aspx>
- ^ "McAfee to buy whitelisting vendor Solidcore" Lance Whitney. CNET. 15 May 2009. <http://news.cnet.com/8301-1009_3-10241685-83.html>
- ^ "McAfee to buy Solidcore for whitelisting technology" Ellen Messmer. Network World. 15 May 2009. <http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9133151/McAfee_to_buy_Solidcore_for_whitelisting_technologyMcA>
- ^ "McAfee buys rival firm to boost services" Ellen Messmer. Network World. 31 July 2009. <http://news.techworld.com/mobile-wireless/120119/mcafee-buys-rival-firm-to-boost-services/>
- ^ "McAfee acquires Secure Computing" 19 November 2008. <http://www.domain-b.com/companies/companies_m/McAfee/20081119_McAfee.html>
- ^ "McAfee to Buy Data Protection Vendor Reconnex" Robert McMillan. PC World. 31 July 2008. <http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/149238/mcafee_to_buy_data_protection_vendor_reconnex.html>
- ^ "McAfee picks up DLP maker Reconnex for $46 million" Robert McMillan. SC Magazine. 1 Aug 2008. <http://www.scmagazineus.com/mcafee-picks-up-dlp-maker-reconnex-for-46-million/article/113269/>
- ^ "McAfee Buys into Web Site Certification with ScanAlert Acquisition" Brian Prince. eWeek. 31 Oct 2007. <http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Security/McAfee-Buys-into-Web-Site-Certification-with-ScanAlert-Acquisition/>
- ^ "McAfee Buys ScanAlert's 'Hacker Safe' Tech" Chloe Albanesius. PC Magazine. 30 Oct 2007. <http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2209842,00.asp>
- ^ "McAfee acquires SafeBoot for endpoint encryption" SearchSecurity.com Staff. SearchSecurity.com. 09 Oct 2007. <http://searchsecurity.techtarget.com/news/article/0,289142,sid14_gci1275984,00.html>
- ^ "McAfee completes SafeBoot acquisition" Net Security. 20 Nov 2007. <http://www.net-security.org/secworld.php?id=5623>
- ^ "McAfee Acquires Leak Prevention Developer" Gregg Keizer, CRN News 16 Oct 2006.<http://www.crn.com/news/security/193303029/mcafee-acquires-leak-prevention-developer.htm;jsessionid=Ezza2luVuoauE6KwQroluQ**.ecappj03>
External links
|
|
Platforms |
|
|
Discontinued |
|
|
Current |
|
|
Upcoming |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Consulting and
outsourcing |
|
|
Imaging |
|
|
Information storage |
|
|
Mainframes |
|
|
Mobile devices |
|
|
Networking equipment |
|
|
OEMs |
|
|
Personal computers
and servers |
|
|
Semiconductors |
|
|
Software |
|
|
Telecommunications
services |
|
|
Websites |
|
|
Methodology: FY2010/11 applicable revenues of over: group 1-10 and 12 - US$3 billion; group 11 - US$10 billion
|
|