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Check Point buys NFR Security for $20M

news
Dec 19, 20062 mins

Check Point snaps up Israeli company for its intrusion detection and prevention technologies

Check Point Software Technologies is making its second acquisition in as many months, scooping up NFR Security for about $20 million.

Check Point plans to incorporate NFR’s intrusion detection and prevention technologies into its own security portfolio of firewall, VPN (virtual private network) and security management products. The resulting product will offer a high level of intelligence, adaptability and manageability, Check Point said.

In addition to that bundled offering, Check Point will also sell a stand-alone intrusion detection and prevention product that will combine NFR’s product line with Check Point’s InterSpect internal security gateway products.

Check Point specializes in pre-emptive security, offering a unified security architecture that provides protection across an entire network. NFR offers intrusion detection and prevention technologies, protecting against malicious code, backdoors, intrusion attacks, and other issues.

NFR, of Rockville, Maryland and has 22 employees. U.S. regulatory authorities have already approved the acquisition, which is expected to close before the end of this year.

Last month, Check Point announced it would buy Pointsec Mobile Technologies for $586 million in order to extend its offering to laptops and other remote access devices.

That deal followed a proposed acquisition of Sourcefire earlier this year, which Check Point had to withdraw after some U.S. government agencies, which are Sourcefire customers, protested in apparent concern about the acquisition’s national security implications. Check Point is an Israeli company.

nancy_gohring

Nancy Gohring is a freelance journalist who started writing about mobile phones just in time to cover the transition to digital. She's written about PCs from Hanover, cellular networks from Singapore, wireless standards from Cyprus, cloud computing from Seattle and just about any technology subject you can think of from Las Vegas. Her work has appeared in the New York Times, Computerworld, Wired, the Seattle Times and other well-respected publications.

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