EMC Buys RSA Security for $2.1B 47
jam244 writes to mention the news of RSA's purchase by EMC. The deal is expected to go through in late third or early fourth quarter of 2006. Once folded into the company, RSA will act as the company's information security division. From the article: "Stice said the proposed price for RSA was 'somewhat expensive,' but added that the deal has the potential to improve EMC's business mix, broaden its product portfolio and further penetrate the consumer security storage market."
Re:EMC FP? (Score:5, Funny)
Rivest and Stein (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Rivest and Stein (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Rivest and Stein (Score:1)
Re:Rivest and Stein (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Rivest and Stein (Score:2)
Good news... probably (Score:1, Insightful)
Same guys that bought VMWARE (Score:5, Insightful)
Novell Directory Service [eDirectory] (Score:4, Insightful)
Same guys that bought VMWARE
Novell, with somewhere between 100 million & 200 million installed seats of Novell Directory Services ["eDirectory"], has got to be the world's leading vendor of RSA-based identification, authorization, and encryption products.
So if Novell ever goes belly-up [slashdot.org], then it seems like EMC might be very interested in the bankruptcy sale.
Oh, and did I mention that Novell has this software product called "Novell Storage Services"?
Re:Same guys that bought VMWARE (Score:2)
I don't know if they'll be a dominant player beyond disk/data as they have not change much since their company inception. They better be doing something. EMC has been selling their 10+ years old product without doing much to enhance it while digital storage in general has gotten so cheap these days. They has been charging their customers a
Re:Same guys that bought VMWARE (Score:3, Insightful)
Look at all their market moves and aquisitions with that understanding, and they all make sense.
They are focused as a laser beam right now.
Re:Same guys that bought VMWARE (Score:2)
With the notable exception, maybe, of that aforementioned VMware acquisition. So far the policy has been pretty laissez-faire ... no attempt to integrate VMware technology with their storage offerings. What's it all about?
Re:Same guys that bought VMWARE (Score:3, Interesting)
Centralize storage onto big iron.
Citrix will be next. Centralize desktops onto big iron.
Re:Same guys that bought VMWARE (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Same guys that bought VMWARE (Score:2)
SAN storage is like the internet 20 years ago, wide open. Storage folks are starting to realize that when you have a lot of computers connected to a single RAID box, you need better protection of the data. Look for encrypted storage protocols to be built in at the hardware level. This will pave the way for running iSCSI over the internet to do remote copy and backup, for example.
Oh, its R *S* A... (Score:2, Funny)
Complete list of acquisitions... (Score:5, Interesting)
Looks like they've been busy :)
http://religiousfreaks.com/ [religiousfreaks.com]Two dollars and 18 cents!!! (Score:1)
What will this mean for the products (Score:2, Insightful)
The big question is if the CA too will be cut-off... there is lots of viable options here too Ejbca [ejbca.org] for example <shameless plug>There is commercial support available</shameless plug>.
all going to crap (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:all going to crap (Score:1)
Re:all going to crap (Score:1)
Re:all going to crap (Score:2)
*Spock turns from his scope and says...* (Score:3, Insightful)
Encrypted SAN traffic? Tasty! (Score:3, Insightful)
That way, they could argue that they not only keep your storage secure physically, but logically as well. For shops that have geographically-spanned SANs, this could be a helluva selling point.
Trying hard..... (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Trying hard..... (Score:1)
Well, we have a Documentum installation at work, and since it doesn't do file-deltas on versions and since most users don't understand the differences between "checkout" and "export" and "checkin" and "import", we frequently get 200MB flash files that have over 100 versions on them with no differences at all. That uses up a lot of disk space really, really fast.
Guess who we buy our disks from?
Am I the only one (Score:1)
Re:Am I the only one (Score:1)
Why does... (Score:1)
OT, I know... I know....
oh, good... (*to self: aaaauuuggghhhh!!!!!) (Score:3, Insightful)
The people at McAfee/NA were a bit brighter about it, and the value of the Foundstone name and reputation wasn't squandered as badly as it could have been when they got bought out. Sure Foundstone shed people just as @stake did, but there's a world of difference. They decided to follow perceived distinctiveness as a tool for selling consulting, and perceived ubiquity as a tool to sell products; the names differentiate them.
Good luck to RSA. I'm sure they'll keep the name, expand their consulting services and probably give us a hell of a run for our money. (What with EMC already competing with Veritas/Symantec...) It's gonna be an interesting time.
J
*Best line this week: "If you're happy and you know it, stick with your current dosage."
new hire (Score:1)
In Other News (Score:1)
(1, never heard of these companies, 2, who cares?)
EMC (Score:1)