- Kindle back orders stretch 3 months at Amazon
- Cisco shutting down between holidays
- Smartphone smackdown: Storm vs. iPhone
- 12 myths about how the Internet works
- Google layoffs: 10,000 jobs being cut
U.K. anti-virus company Sophos Wednesday said it bought the Canadian company ActiveState for $23 million in cash, adding ActiveState's line of anti-spam products to Sophos' enterprise anti-virus software.
The deal, which closed on Tuesday, will strengthen the position of both companies, which faced stiff competition for business customers from major anti-virus vendors selling integrated anti-spam and anti-virus products, industry experts say.
Based in Vancouver, British Columbia, ActiveState is a six-year-old, privately held company that made a name for itself selling software development tools for open source languages before moving into the content filtering arena, according to ActiveState President and CEO Steve Munford.
The deal comes after the two companies formed a working relationship six months ago to cooperate in selling their technologies into large corporate accounts, according to Steve Orenberg, president of Sophos' U.S. operations.
ActiveState products complement Sophos' software and the companies had similar customer bases, focusing almost exclusively on enterprises and business customers, rather than consumers, he said.
ActiveState's PureMessage anti-spam gateway analyzes e-mail messages to detect spam and also has content inspection features that allow companies to set and enforce corporate policies for message content.
Sophos initially will support PureMessage along with its own gateway mail product, MailMonitor. The two products will be merged some time in 2004, Orenberg said.
Sophos also will continue to support ActiveState's development tools business indefinitely under the ActiveState brand, Orenberg said.
Though not core to Sophos' business model, ActiveState's programming tools and languages business provides a deep well of development experience within the company that can contribute to filtering and anti-virus tools, he said.
The ActiveState products also have a loyal customer base within Fortune 1000 companies that Sophos hopes will serve as a calling card for the company's anti-virus and anti-spam products, Orenberg said.
Development of the PureMessage product will continue in Vancouver and ActiveState's 104-person staff will be absorbed into Sophos, according to a company spokeswoman.
Partner Content
Brilliantly simple security and control solutions for email, web and endpoint
www.sophos.com
Stopping data leakage
Learn how to exploit your current security investment to control the information that flows into, through and out of your network.
Download the white paper.
Why detection rates aren't enough
Evaluating endpoint security products is a time-consuming and daunting task. Learn the six critical questions you need to ask prospective vendors to get the right endpoint solution.
Download the white paper.
Applications: taking back control
Employees installing unauthorized applications is a growing threat to business security and productivity. Cost-effectively reduce this threat by integrating control into your malware protection.
Learn more today.
Comment