McAfee


McAfee, Inc.
Type Public (NYSEMFE)
Founded 1987
Headquarters Flag of the United States Santa Clara, California, USA
Key people John McAfee, founder
David DeWalt, CEO
Industry Computer software
Revenue US$1.31 billion (2007)
Employees ~3900 (2007)
Website www.mcafee.com

McAfee, Inc. (NYSEMFE)is an antivirus software and computer security company headquartered in Santa Clara, California. It markets McAfee VirusScan and related security products and services, including the IntruShield, Entercept, and Foundstone brands.

Contents

History

McAfee headquarters 3965 Freedom Cirle Santa Clara CA 95054.
McAfee headquarters 3965 Freedom Cirle Santa Clara CA 95054.

The company was founded in 1987 as McAfee Associates, named for its founder John McAfee. 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 Symark Software), the growth of antivirus 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 P.L.C, 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."[1]

On April 5, 2006, McAfee bought out SiteAdvisor for a reputed $70 million[2] 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. (http://www.sec.gov/news/press/2006-3.htm)

In October 2006 McAfee fired their President Kevin Weiss 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.

In January 2007 under pressure from ex-employees worldwide, several of which backed a class action in the US, 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 March 5, 2007 McAfee named Dave DeWalt chief executive officer and president. He has replaced interim CEO Dale Fuller. Fuller will remain on McAfee's Board. DeWalt is expected to be named to the board of McAfee.[3]

McAfee has developed a number of product packages for their customers, the most recent ones being for consumer McAfee Total Protection and for business McAfee Total Protection Service, McAfee Total Protection Service Advanced, McAfee Total Protection Endpoint and McAfee Total Protection Endpoint Advanced. McAfee Total Protection - Consumer combines a number of security tools and is meant to compete with bundled solutions such as Symantec's Norton 360 and Microsoft's Windows Live OneCare.

Products

McAfee currently develops many security tools for the PC, both for corporate and home users. The list below isn't comprehensive. See the links further down for all products. A subset of McAfee's products include:

Naming rights

McAfee has had naming rights to the McAfee Coliseum, home of the Oakland Athletics baseball team in Oakland, California since 1997 when then-Network Associates acquired sponsorship to the venue formerly called the Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum. [2]

Controversy

The Securities and Exchange Commission filed suit against McAfee for overstating their profits.[4]

See also

References

External links



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