In 1994 Check Point signed an
OEM agreement with
Sun Microsystems,[7] followed by a distribution agreement with
HP in 1995.[11] The same year, the U.S. head office was established in
Redwood City, California.
By February 1996, the company was named worldwide
firewall market leader by
IDC, with a market share of 40 percent.[12]
In June 1996 Check Point raised $67 million from its
initial public offering on
NASDAQ.[13]
In 1998, Check Point established a partnership with
Nokia, which bundled Check Point's Software with Nokia's computer
Network Security Appliances.[13]
On 14 August 2003 Check Point opened its branch in India's capital,
Delhi (with the legal name Check Point Software Technologies India Pvt. Ltd.). Eyal Desheh was the first director appointed in India.
During the first decade of the 21st century Check Point started acquiring other
IT security companies, including Nokia's network security business unit in 2009.[15]
In 2019, researchers at Check Point found a security breach in
Xiaomi phone apps.[16] The security flaw was reported preinstalled.[17]
Check Point is presently focused on what it calls "fifth generation cyber security," or “Gen V.” It identifies the fifth generation as focused on large-scale and fast-moving attacks across mobile, cloud and on-premise networks that easily bypass the conventional, static detection-based defenses being used by most organizations today.[18][19][20][21][22]
Over the years many employees who worked at Check Point have left to start their own software companies. These include
Shlomo Kremer, who started
Imperva; Nir Zuk, who founded
Palo Alto Networks; Ruvi Kitov and Reuven Harrison of
Tufin; Yonadav Leitersdorf, who founded
Indeni; and Avi Shua, who founded
Orca Security;
On 23 July 2020,
Aryaka confirmed an alliance with Check Point Software Technologies to optimize the SD-WAN system operated by Aryaka Cloud-First, and Check Point CloudGuard Link and CloudGuard Edge to provide optimized protection and SD-WAN as-a-Service.[23]
Products
Check Point offers the following primary products:
Mobile Security (Mobile Threat Prevention product line)[26]
Acquisitions
MetaInfo, makers of the
MetaIP DNS, DHCP, RADIUS, and LDAP management solution,[27] in 1998 for $22 million in shares.[28]
Zone Labs, makers of the
ZoneAlarm personal firewall software, in 2003, for $205 million in cash and shares.[29]
Protect Data, the holding company for PointSec Mobile Technologies, in a cash deal valued at $586m in late 2006.[30] Prior to their acquisition by Check Point, Protect Data acquired Reflex Software.[31]
NFR security, an intrusion prevention system developer, for $20 million in late 2006, following its failed plan to acquire the larger IPS vendor Sourcefire.[32]
Nokia Security Appliances division was acquired in April 2009.[15]
Dynasec, a provider of enterprise governance, risk management, and compliance products, was acquired in November 2011. Dynasec offers a Web-based enterprise application, branded as Easy2comply, for
Sarbanes-Oxley compliance,
Basel II compliance, operational
risk management, information security management,
HIPAA compliance, and internal audit management.[34]
Hyperwise, an early-stage startup focused on CPU level threat prevention, was acquired Feb 2015.[35]
Lacoon Mobile Security was acquired in April 2015.[36]
In 2005, Check Point tried to acquire intrusion prevention system developers
Sourcefire for $225 million,[45] but later withdrew its offer after it became clear US authorities (specifically, the
Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States
) would try to block the acquisition.[46]
SofaWare legal battle
SofaWare Technologies was founded in 1999, as a cooperation between Check Point and SofaWare's founders, Adi Ruppin and Etay Bogner, with the purpose of extending Check Point from the enterprise market to the small business, consumer and branch office market. SofaWare's co-founder Adi Ruppin said that his company wanted to make the technology simple to use and affordable, and to lift the burden of security management from end users while adding some features.[47] In 2001 SofaWare began selling firewall appliances under the SofaWare S-Box brand;[48] in 2002 the company started selling the Safe@Office and Safe@Home line of security appliances, under the Check Point brand.[47] By the fourth quarter of 2002 sales of SofaWare's Safe@Office firewall/VPN appliances had increased greatly, and SofaWare held the #1 revenue position in the worldwide firewall/VPN sub-$490 appliance market, with a 38% revenue market share.[49]
Relations between Check Point and the SofaWare founders went sour after the company acquisition in 2002. In 2004 Etay Bogner, co-founder of SofaWare, sought court approval to file a
shareholderderivative suit, claiming Check Point was not transferring funds to SofaWare as required for its use of SofaWare's products and technology. His derivative suit was ultimately successful, and Check Point was ordered to pay SofaWare 13 million
shekels for breach of contract.
In 2006 the
Tel Aviv District Court Judge ruled that Bogner SofaWare could sue Check Point by proxy for $5.1 million in alleged damage to SofaWare.[50] Bogner claimed that Check Point, which owned 60% of Sofaware, had behaved belligerently, and withheld monies due for use of SofaWare technology and products[50] Check Point appealed the ruling, but lost.[51]
In 2009 the
Israeli Supreme Court ruled that a group of founders of SofaWare, which includes Bogner, had
veto power over any decision of SofaWare. The court ruled that the three founders could exercise their veto power only as a group and by majority rule.
In 2011 Check Point settled all litigation relating to SofaWare. As part of the settlement it acquired the SofaWare shares held by Bogner and Ruppin, and began a process of acquiring the remaining shares, resulting in SofaWare becoming a wholly owned subsidiary.[52]
^
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