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Gen Digital

Gen Digital Inc. (formerly Symantec Corporation and NortonLifeLock) is a multinational software company co-headquartered in Tempe, Arizona and Prague, Czech Republic. The company provides cybersecurity software and services. Gen is a Fortune 500 company and a member of the S&P 500 stock-market index. The company also has development centers in Pune, Chennai and Bangalore. Its portfolio includes Norton, Avast, LifeLock, Avira, AVG, ReputationDefender, and CCleaner.

Gen Digital Inc.
Gen Digital co-headquarters in Tempe, Arizona
Formerly
  • Symantec Corporation
    (1982–2019)
  • NortonLifeLock Inc.
    (2019–2022)
TypePublic
IndustryComputer software
FoundedMarch 1, 1982; 41 years ago (1982-03-01) in Sunnyvale, California, U.S.
FounderGary Hendrix
Headquarters
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
ProductsCybersecurity software
Brands
ServicesComputer security
Revenue US$2.79 billion (2022)
US$1.01 billion (2022)
US$836 million (2022)
Total assets US$6.94 billion (2022)
Total equity US$−93 million (2022)
Number of employees
c. 2,700 (2022)
Websitewww.gendigital.com
Footnotes / references
Financials as of April 1, 2022[1]

On October 9, 2014, Symantec declared it would split into two independent publicly traded companies by the end of 2015. One company would focus on security, the other on information management. On January 29, 2016, Symantec sold its information-management subsidiary, named Veritas Technologies, and which Symantec had acquired in 2004,[2] to The Carlyle Group.[3] On August 9, 2019, Broadcom Inc. announced they would be acquiring the Enterprise Security software division of Symantec for $10.7 billion, and the company became known as NortonLifeLock.[4] After completing its merger with Avast in September 2022, the company adopted the name Gen Digital Inc.[5]

History

1982 to 1989

 
Logo of Symantec used from 1990 to 2001

Founded in 1982 by Gary Hendrix with a National Science Foundation grant, Symantec was originally focused on artificial intelligence-related projects, including a database program.[6] Hendrix hired several Stanford University natural language processing researchers as the company's first employees.[6]

In 1984, it became clear that the advanced natural language and database system that Symantec had developed could not be ported from DEC minicomputers to the PC.[7] This left Symantec without a product, but with expertise in natural language database query systems and technology.[8] As a result, later in 1984, Symantec was acquired by another, smaller software startup company, C&E Software, founded by Denis Coleman and Gordon Eubanks and headed by Eubanks.[8] C&E Software developed a combined file management and word processing program called Q&A.[8] Barry Greenstein, now a professional poker player, was the principal developer of the word processor component within Q&A.[citation needed]

The merged company retained the name Symantec.[8] Eubanks became its chairman, Vern Raburn, the former president of the original Symantec, remained as president of the combined company.[9] The new Symantec combined the file management and word processing functionality that C&E had planned, and added an advanced Natural Language query system (designed by Gary Hendrix and engineered by Dan Gordon) that set new standards for ease of database query and report generation. The natural language system was named "The Intelligent Assistant". Turner chose the name of Q&A for Symantec's flagship product, in large part because the name lent itself to use in a short, easily merchandised logo. Brett Walter designed the user interface of Q&A (Brett Walter, director of product management). Q&A was released in November 1985.

In 1986, Vern Raburn and Gordon Eubanks swapped roles, and Eubanks became CEO and president of Symantec, while Raburn became its chairman.[10] After this change, Raburn had little involvement with Symantec, and in a few years, Eubanks added chairmanship to his other roles.[citation needed] After a slow start for sales of Q&A in the fall of 1985 and spring of 1986, Rod Turner, a Symantec Sr. Executive, signed up a new advertising agency called Elliott/Dickens, embarked on an aggressive new advertising campaign, and came up with the "Six Pack Program" in which all Symantec employees, regardless of role, went on the road, training and selling nationwide in the United States. Turner named it Six Pack because employees were to work six days a week, see six dealerships per day, train six sales representatives per store and stay with friends free or at Motel 6.[11] Simultaneously, a promotion was run jointly with SofSell (which was Symantec's exclusive wholesale distributor in the United States for the first year that Q&A was on the market). This promotion was very successful in encouraging dealers to try Q&A.

During this time, Symantec was advised by its board members Jim Lally and John Doerr that if it would cut its expenses and grow revenues enough to achieve cash flow break-even, then Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield & Byers would back the company in raising more venture capital. To accomplish this, the management team worked out a salary reduction schedule where the chairman and the CEO would take zero pay, all vice presidents would take a 50% pay cut, and all other employees' pay was cut by 15%. Two employees were laid off. Eubanks also negotiated a sizable rent reduction on the office space the company had leased in the days of the original Symantec. These expense reductions, combined with strong international sales of Q&A, enabled the company to attain break-even.

The significantly increased traction for Q&A from this re-launch grew Symantec's revenues substantially, along with early success for Q&A in international markets (uniquely a German version was shipped three weeks after the United States version, and it was the first software in the world that supported German Natural Language) following Turner's having emphasized establishing international sales distribution and multiple language versions of Q&A from the initial shipment.

In 1985, Rod Turner negotiated the publishing agreement with David Whitney for Symantec's second product, which Turner named NoteIt (an annotation utility for Lotus 1-2-3). It was evident to Turner that NoteIt would confuse the dealer channel if it was launched under the Symantec name because Symantec had built up interest by that stage in Q&A (but not yet shipped it), and because the low price for the utility would not be initially attracted to the dealer channel until demand had been built up. Turner felt that the product should be marketed under a unique brand name.

Turner and Gordon E. Eubanks Jr., then chairman of Symantec Corporation, agreed to form a new division of Symantec, and Eubanks delegated the choice of name to Turner. Turner chose the name Turner Hall Publishing, to be a new division of Symantec devoted to publishing third-party software and hardware. The objective of the division was to diversify revenues and accelerate the growth of Symantec. Turner chose the name Turner Hall Publishing, using his last name and that of Dottie Hall (Director of Marketing Communications) to convey the sense of a stable, long-established, company.[12][13] Turner Hall Publishing's first offering was Note-It, a notation utility add-in for Lotus 1-2-3, which was developed by David Whitney, and licensed to Symantec.[14][15] Its second product was the Turner Hall Card, which was a 256k RAM, half slot memory card, initially made to inexpensively increase the available memory for Symantec's flagship product, Q&A. The Turner Hall division also marketed the card as a standalone product. Turner Hall's third product, also a 1-2-3 add-in was SQZ! a Lotus 1-2-3 spreadsheet compression utility developed by Chris Graham Synex Systems.[16] In the summer of 1986 Eubanks and Turner recruited Tom Byers from Digital Research, to expand the Turner Hall Publishing product family and lead the Turner Hall effort.

By the winter of 1986–87, the Turner Hall Publishing division had achieved success with NoteIt, the Turner Hall Card and SQZ!. The popularity of these products, while contributing a relatively small portion of revenues to Symantec, conveyed the impression that Symantec was already a diversified company, and indeed, many industry participants were under the impression that Symantec had acquired Turner Hall Publishing. In 1987, Byers recruited Ted Schlein into the Turner Hall Product Group to assist in building the product family and in marketing.

Revenues from Q&A, and Symantec's early launch into the international marketplace, combined with Turner Hall Publishing, generated the market presence and scale that enabled Symantec to make its first merger/acquisition, in February 1987, that of Breakthrough Software, maker of the TimeLine project management software for DOS. Because this was the first time that Symantec had acquired a business that had revenues, inventory, and customers, Eubanks chose to change nothing at BreakThrough Software for six months, and the actual merger logistics started in the summer of 1987, with Turner being appointed by Eubanks as general manager of the TimeLine business unit, Turner was made responsible for the successful integration of the company into Symantec and ongoing growth of the business, with P&L. There was a heavy emphasis placed on making the minimum disruption by Eubanks and Turner.

Soon after the acquisition of TimeLine/Breakthrough Software, Eubanks reorganized Symantec, structuring the company around product-centric groups, each having its development, quality assurance, technical support, and product marketing functions, and a general manager with profit and loss responsibility. Sales, finance, and operations were centralized functions that were shared. This structure lent itself well to Symantec's further growth through mergers and acquisitions. Eubanks made Turner general manager of the new TimeLine Product Group, and simultaneously of the Q&A Product Group, and made Tom Byers general manager of the Turner Hall Product Group. Turner continued to build and lead the company's international business and marketing for the whole company.

At the TimeLine Product Group, Turner drove strong marketing, promotion and sales programs to accelerate momentum. By 1989 this merger was very successful—product group morale was high, TimeLine development continued apace, and the increased sales and marketing efforts applied built the TimeLine into the clear market lead in PC project management software on DOS. Both the Q&A and TimeLine product groups were healthily profitable. The profit stream and merger success set the stage for subsequent merger and acquisition activity by the company, and indeed funded the losses of some of the product groups that were subsequently acquired.[12] In 1989, Eubanks hired John Laing as VP worldwide sales, and Turner transferred the international division to Laing. Eubanks also recruited Bob Dykes to be executive vice president for operations and finance, in anticipation of the upcoming IPO. On June 23, 1989 Symantec had its IPO.[17]

1990 to 1999

In May 1990, Symantec announced its intent to merge with and acquire Peter Norton Computing, a developer of various utilities for DOS. Turner was appointed as product group manager for the Norton business, and made responsible for the merger, with P&L responsibility. Ted Schlein was made product group manager for the Q&A business.

The Peter Norton group merger logistical effort began immediately while the companies sought approval for the merger, and in August 1990, Symantec concluded the purchase—by this time the combination of the companies was already complete. Symantec's consumer antivirus and data management utilities are still marketed under the Norton name. At the time of the merger, Symantec had built upon its Turner Hall Publishing presence in the utility market, by introducing Symantec Antivirus for the Macintosh (SAM), and Symantec Utilities for the Macintosh (SUM). These two products were already market leaders on the Mac, and this success made the Norton merger more strategic. Symantec had already begun the development of a DOS-based antivirus program one year before the merger with Norton. The management team had decided to enter the antivirus market in part because it was felt that the antivirus market entailed a great deal of ongoing work to stay ahead of new viruses. The team felt that Microsoft would be unlikely to find this effort attractive, which would lengthen the viability of the market for Symantec. Turner decided to use the Norton name for obvious reasons, on what became the Norton Antivirus, which Turner and the Norton team launched in 1991. At the time of the merger, Norton revenues were approximately 20 to 25% of the combined entity. By 1993, while being led by Turner, Norton product group revenues had grown to approximately 82% of Symantec's total.

At one time Symantec was also known for its development tools, particularly the THINK Pascal, THINK C, Symantec C++, Enterprise Developer and Visual Cafe packages that were popular on the Macintosh and IBM PC compatible platforms. These product lines resulted from acquisitions made by the company in the late 1980s and early 1990s. These businesses and the Living Videotext acquisition were consistently unprofitable for Symantec, and these losses diverted expenditures away from both the Q&A for Windows and the TimeLine for Windows development efforts during the critical period from 1988 through 1992. Symantec exited this business in the late-1990s as competitors such as Metrowerks, Microsoft and Borland gained significant market share.

In 1996, Symantec Corporation was alleged of misleading financial statements in violation of GAAP.[18]

2000 to present

 
Symantec sponsored Porsche 997 GT3 Cup competing at the 2012 Petit Le Mans

From 1999 to April 2009, Symantec was led by CEO John W. Thompson, a former VP at IBM. At the time, Thompson was the only African-American leading a major US technology company. He was succeeded in April 2009 by the company's long-time Symantec executive Enrique Salem.[19] Under Salem, Symantec completed the acquisition of Verisign's Certificate Authority business, dramatically increasing their share of that market.

 
Logo of Symantec used from 2001 to 2010

In 2009, Symantec released a list of the then "100 dirtiest websites", which contain the most malware as detected by Norton Safe Web.[20][21]

 
Former Symantec headquarters in Mountain View, California

Salem was abruptly fired in 2012 for disappointing earnings performance and replaced by Steve Bennett, a former CEO of Intuit and GE executive.[22] In January 2013, Bennett announced a major corporate reorganization, with the goal of reducing costs and improving Symantec's product line. He said that sales and marketing "had been high costs but did not provide quality outcomes". He concluded that "Our system is just broken".[23]

Robert Enderle of CIO.com reviewed the reorganization and noted that Bennett was following the General Electric model of being product-focused instead of customer-focused. He concluded "Eliminating middle management removes a large number of highly paid employees. This will tactically improve Symantec's bottom line but reduce the skills needed to ensure high-quality products in the long term."[24]

In March 2014, Symantec fired Steve Bennett from his CEO position and named Michael Brown as interim president and chief executive. Including the interim CEO, Symantec has had 3 CEOs in less than two years.[25][26] On September 25, 2014, Symantec announced the appointment of Michael A. Brown as its president and chief executive officer.[27] Brown had served as the company's interim president and chief executive officer since March 20, 2014.[28] Mr. Brown has served as a member of the company's board of directors since July 2005 following the acquisition of VERITAS Software Corporation. Mr. Brown had served on the VERITAS board of directors since 2003.[29]

In July 2016, Symantec introduced a product to help carmakers protect connected vehicles against zero-day attacks. The Symantec Anomaly Detection for Automotive is an IoT product for manufacturers and uses machine learning to provide in-vehicle security analytics.[30] Greg Clark assumed the position of CEO in August 2016.[31]

In November 2016, Symantec announced its intent to acquire identity theft protection company LifeLock for $2.3 billion.[32]

In August 2017, Symantec announced that it had agreed to sell its business unit that verifies the identity of websites to Thoma Bravo. With this acquisition, Thoma Bravo plans to merge the Symantec business unit with its own web certification company, DigiCert.[33]

On January 4, 2018, Symantec and BT (formerly British Telecom) announced their partnership that provides new endpoint security protection.[34]

In May 2018, Symantec initiated an internal audit to address concerns raised by a former employee,[35][36] causing it to delay its annual earnings report.[37]

In August 2018, Symantec announced that the hedge fund Starboard Value had put forward five nominees to stand for election to the Symantec board of directors at Symantec's 2018 Annual Meeting of Stockholders.[38] This followed a Schedule 13D filing by Starboard showing that it had accumulated a 5.8% stake in Symantec.[39] In September 2018, Symantec announced that three nominees of Starboard were joining the Symantec board, two with immediate effect (including Starboard Managing Member Peter Feld) and one following the 2018 Annual Meeting of Stockholders.[40]

On May 9, 2019, Symantec announced that Clark would be stepping down and that board member Rick Hill, previously put forward by Starboard, had been appointed interim president and CEO.[41] Vincent Pilette also joined Symantec as its new CFO.[42]

 
Logo of NortonLifeLock from 2019 until 2022

On August 9, 2019, Broadcom announced they would be acquiring the Enterprise software division of Symantec for $10.7 billion. This is after having attempted to purchase the whole company. The Norton family of products will remain in the Symantec portfolio. The sale closed on November 4, 2019, and subsequently, the company adopted the NortonLifeLock name and relocated its headquarters from Mountain View, California to LifeLock's offices in Tempe, Arizona.[4][43]

In 2021, a crypto-miner was added to the Norton 360 product, called Norton Crypto. Once activated by the user, Norton Crypto mines Ethereum (ETH) using the installed machine's graphics card while idle. The program also creates a secure wallet on the same machine.[44][45]Norton announced it was permanently disabling the feature on September 14, 2022, due to the Ethereum merge.[46]

Demerger

On October 9, 2014, Symantec declared that the company would separate into two independent publicly traded companies by the end of 2015.[47] Symantec will continue to focus on security, while a new company will be established focusing on information management. Symantec confirmed on January 28, 2015, that the information management business would be called Veritas Technologies Corporation, marking a return of the Veritas name.[48] In August 2015, Symantec agreed to sell Veritas to a private equity group led by The Carlyle Group for $8 billion. The sale was completed by February 2016, turning Veritas into a privately owned company.[49]

Products

Norton

Norton product line includes Norton AntiVirus, Norton Security, Norton Small Business, Norton Family, Norton Mobile Security, Norton Online Backup, Norton 360, Norton Utilities and Norton Computer Tune Up.[citation needed] Norton's line also includes LifeLock and ReputationDefender.

In 2012, PCTools iAntiVirus was rebranded as a Norton product under the name iAntivirus, and released to the Mac App Store. Also in 2012, the Norton Partner Portal was relaunched to support sales to consumers throughout the EMEA technologies.[citation needed]

Avast

Avast product line includes Avast Antivirus, Avast Premium Security, Avast Cleanup, Avast Secure Browser, and Avast SecureLine VPN. As of 2017, it is the most popular antivirus vendor on the market and it had the largest market share.[50]

AVG

AVG product line includes AVG AntiVirus, AVG Internet Security, AVG Secure VPN, AVG PC TuneUp, and AVG Driver Updater. Previously a publicly company in February 2012, it was acquired by Avast in July 2016 for $1.3 billion.[51]

Avira

Avira product line includes Avira Free Security, Avira Internet Security, Avira Prime and Avira Phantom VPN.

Other

Other products offered by Gen Digital include CCleaner, Recuva, Speccy, Defraggler, HMA, and SONAR.

Mergers and acquisitions

ACT!

In 1993, Symantec acquired ACT! from Contact Software International. Symantec sold ACT! to SalesLogix in 1999. At the time it was the world's most popular CRM application for Windows and Macintosh.[52]

Veritas

On December 16, 2004, Veritas Software and Symantec announced their plans for a merger. With Veritas valued at $13.5 billion, it was the largest software industry merger to date.[53] Symantec's shareholders voted to approve the merger on June 24, 2005; the deal closed successfully on July 2, 2005.[54] July 5, 2005, was the first day of business for the U.S. offices of the new, combined software company. As a result of this merger, Symantec includes storage- and availability-related products in its portfolio, namely Veritas File System (VxFS), Veritas Volume Manager (VxVM), Veritas Volume Replicator (VVR), Veritas Cluster Server (VCS), NetBackup (NBU), Backup Exec (BE) and Enterprise Vault (EV).[citation needed]

On January 29, 2016, Symantec sold Veritas Technologies to The Carlyle Group.[2]

Sygate

On August 16, 2005, Symantec acquired Sygate,[55] a security software firm based in Fremont, California, with about 200 staff.[56] As of November 30, 2005, all Sygate personal firewall products were discontinued.[57]

Altiris

On January 29, 2007, Symantec announced plans to acquire Altiris,[58] and on April 6, 2007, the acquisition was completed.[59] Altiris specializes in service-oriented management software that allows organizations to manage IT assets.[58] It also provides software for web services, security and systems management products. Established in 1998, Altiris is headquartered in Lindon, Utah.[60]

Vontu

On November 5, 2007, Symantec announced its acquisition of Vontu, a Data Loss Prevention (DLP) company, for $350 million.[61]

Application Performance Management business

On January 17, 2008, Symantec announced[62] that it was spinning off its Application Performance Management (APM) business and the i3 product line to Vector Capital.[63] Precise Software Solutions took over development, product management, marketing and sales for the APM business, launching as an independent company on September 17, 2008.[64]

PC Tools

On August 18, 2008, Symantec announced the signing of an agreement to acquire PC Tools. Under the agreement, PC Tools would maintain separate operations. The financial terms of the acquisition were not disclosed. In May 2013, Symantec announced they were discontinuing the PC Tools line of internet security software.[65]

In December 2013, Symantec announced they were discontinuing and retiring the entire PC Tools brand and offering a non-expiring license to PC Tools Performance Toolkit, PC Tools Registry Mechanic, PC Tools File Recover and PC Tools Privacy Guardian users with an active subscription as of December 4, 2013.[66]

AppStream

On April 18, 2008, Symantec completed the acquisition of AppStream, Inc. (“AppStream”), a nonpublic Palo Alto, California-based provider of endpoint virtualization software. AppStream was acquired to complement Symantec's endpoint management and virtualization portfolio and strategy.[67]

MessageLabs

On October 9, 2008, Symantec announced its intent to acquire Gloucester-based MessageLabs (spun off from Star Internet in 2007) to boost its Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) business. Symantec purchased the online messaging and Web security provider for about $695 million in cash.[68] The acquisition closed on November 17, 2008.[69]

PGP and GuardianEdge

On April 29, 2010, Symantec announced its intent to acquire PGP Corporation and GuardianEdge.[70] The acquisitions closed on June 4, 2010, and provided access to established encryption, key management and technologies to Symantec's customers.[citation needed]

Verisign authentication

 
Logo of Symantec used from 2010 to 2019, adopting Verisign's stylistic V.

On May 19, 2010, Symantec signed a definitive agreement to acquire Verisign's authentication business unit, which included the Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) Certificate, Public Key Infrastructure (PKI), Verisign Trust and Verisign Identity Protection (VIP) authentication services.[71] The acquisition closed on August 9, 2010. In August 2012, Symantec completed its rebranding of the Verisign SSL Certificate Service by renaming the Verisign Trust Seal the Norton Secured Seal.[72] Symantec sold the SSL unit to Digicert for US$950 million in mid 2017.[73]

Rulespace

Acquired on October 10, 2010, RuleSpace is a web categorisation product first developed in 1996.[74] The categorisation is, automated using what Symantec refers to as the Automated Categorization System (ACS). It is used as the base for content filtering by many UK ISP.[citation needed]

Clearwell Systems

On May 19, 2011, Symantec announced the acquisition of Clearwell Systems for approximately $390 million.[75]

LiveOffice

On January 17, 2012, Symantec announced the acquisition of cloud email-archiving company LiveOffice. The acquisition price was $115 million.[76] Last year,[ambiguous] Symantec joined the cloud storage and backup sector with its Enterprise Vault.cloud and Cloud Storage for Enterprise Vault software, in addition to a cloud messaging software, Symantec Instant Messaging Security cloud (IMS.cloud).[citation needed] Symantec stated that the acquisition would add to its information governance products,[76][77] allowing customers to store information on-premises, in Symantec's data centers, or both.

Odyssey Software

On March 2, 2012, Symantec completed the acquisition of Odyssey Software. Odyssey Software's main product was Athena, which was device management software that extended Microsoft System Center software, adding the ability to manage, support and control mobile and embedded devices, such as smartphones and ruggedized handhelds.[55][78]

Nukona Inc.

Symantec completed its acquisition of Nukona, a provider of mobile application management (MAM), on April 2, 2012.[79] The acquisition agreement between Symantec and Nukona was announced on March 20, 2012.[80]

NitroDesk Inc.

In May 2014 Symantec acquired NitroDesk, provider of TouchDown, the market-leading third-party EAS mobile application.[81]

Blue Coat Systems

On June 13, 2016, it was announced that Symantec had acquired Blue Coat for $4.65 billion.[82]

LifeLock

In 2017, Symantec acquired LifeLock Inc.;[83][84] this, in turn, prompted the company to rename itself to NortonLifeLock in 2019.

Avira

Norton LifeLock acquired German security firm Avira in December 2020 for $360 million.[85]

Avast

In August 2021, Norton agreed to merge with Czech cybersecurity software company Avast. The UK Competition and Markets Authority formally cleared the $8.1 billion merger on September 2, 2022.[86]

Security concerns and controversies

Restatement

On August 9, 2004, the company announced that it discovered an error in its calculation of deferred revenue, which represented an accumulated adjustment of $20 million.[87][88]

Endpoint bug

The arrival of the year 2010 triggered a bug in Symantec Endpoint. Symantec reported that malware and intrusion protection updates with "a date greater than December 31, 2009, 11:59 pm [were] considered to be 'out of date.'" The company created and distributed a workaround for the issue.[89]

Scan evasion vulnerability

In March 2010, it was reported that Symantec AntiVirus and Symantec Client Security were prone to a vulnerability that might allow an attacker to bypass on-demand virus scanning, and permit malicious files to escape detection.[90][91][citation needed]

Denial-of-service attack vulnerabilities

In January 2011, multiple vulnerabilities in Symantec products that could be exploited by a denial-of-service attack, and thereby compromise a system, were reported. The products involved were Symantec AntiVirus Corporate Edition Server and Symantec System Center.[92]

The November 12, 2012 Vulnerability Bulletin of the United States Computer Emergency Readiness Team (US-CERT) reported the following vulnerability for older versions of Symantec's Antivirus system: "The decomposer engine in Symantec Endpoint Protection (SEP) 11.0, Symantec Endpoint Protection Small Business Edition 12.0, Symantec AntiVirus Corporate Edition (SAVCE) 10.x, and Symantec Scan Engine (SSE) before 5.2.8 does not properly perform bounds checks of the contents of CAB archives, which allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (application crash) or possibly execute arbitrary code via a crafted file."[93]

The problem relates to older versions of the systems and a patch is available. US-CERT rated the seriousness of this vulnerability as a 9.7 on a 10-point scale. The "decomposer engine" is a component of the scanning system that opens containers, such as compressed files, so that the scanner can evaluate the files within.[citation needed]

Scareware lawsuit

In January 2012, James Gross filed a lawsuit against Symantec for distributing fake scareware scanners that purportedly alerted users of issues with their computers. Gross claimed that after the scan, only some of the errors and problems were corrected, and he was prompted by the scanner to purchase a Symantec app to remove the rest. Gross claimed that he bought the app, but it did not speed up his computer or remove the detected viruses. He hired a digital forensics expert to back up this claim. Symantec denied the allegations and said that it would contest the case.[94] Symantec settled a $11 million fund (up to $9 to more than 1 million eligible customers representing the overpaid amount for the app) and the case was dismissed in court.[95][96]

Source code theft

On January 17, 2012, Symantec disclosed that its network had been hacked. A hacker known as "Yama Tough" had obtained the source code for some Symantec software by hacking an Indian government server.[97] Yama Tough released parts of the code and threatened to release more. According to Chris Paden, a Symantec spokesman, the source code that was taken was for Enterprise products that were between five and six years old.[97]

On September 25, 2012, an affiliate of the hacker group Anonymous published source code from Norton Utilities.[98] Symantec confirmed that it was part of the code that had been stolen earlier, and that the leak included code for 2006 versions of Norton Utilities, pcAnywhere and Norton Antivirus.[98]

Verisign data breach

In February 2012, it was reported that Verisign's network and data had been hacked repeatedly in 2010, but that the breaches had not been disclosed publicly until they were noted in an SEC filing in October 2011.[99] Verisign did not provide information about whether the breach included its certificate authority business, which was acquired by Symantec in late 2010.[99] Oliver Lavery, director of security and research for nCircle, asked rhetorically, "Can we trust any site using Verisign SSL certificates? Without more clarity, the logical answer is no."[100][101]

pcAnywhere exploit

On February 17, 2012, details of an exploit of pcAnywhere were posted. The exploit would allow attackers to crash pcAnywhere on computers running Windows.[102] Symantec released a hotfix for the issue twelve days later.[103]

Hacking of The New York Times network

According to Mandiant, Symantec security products used by The New York Times detected only one of 45 pieces of malware that were installed by Chinese hackers on the newspaper's network during three months in late 2012.[104][105] Symantec responded:

"Advanced attacks like the ones the New York Times described in the following article, <http://nyti.ms/TZtr5z>, underscore how important it is for companies, countries and consumers to make sure they are using the full capability of security solutions. The advanced capabilities in our [E]ndpoint offerings, including our unique reputation-based technology and behavior-based blocking, specifically target sophisticated attacks. Turning on only the signature-based anti-virus components of [E]ndpoint solutions alone [is] not enough in a world that is changing daily from attacks and threats. We encourage customers to be very aggressive in deploying solutions that offer a combined approach to security. Anti-virus software alone is not enough".[106]

Intellectual Ventures suit

In February 2015, Symantec was found guilty of two counts of patent infringement in a suit by Intellectual Ventures Inc and ordered to pay $17 million in compensation and damages,[107] In September 2016, this decision was reversed on appeal by the Federal Circuit.[108][109]

Sustaining digital certificate security

On September 18, 2015, Google notified Symantec that the latter issued 23 test certificates for five organizations, including Google and Opera, without the domain owners' knowledge.[110] Symantec performed another audit and announced that an additional 164 test certificates were mis-issued for 76 domains and 2,458 test certificates were mis-issued for domains that had never been registered. Google requested that Symantec update the public incident report with proven analysis explaining the details on each of the failures.[111]

The company was asked to report all the certificates issued to the Certificate Transparency log henceforth.[112][113] Symantec has since reported implementing Certificate Transparency for all its SSL Certificates. Above all, Google has insisted that Symantec execute a security audit by a third party and to maintain tamper-proof security audit logs.[112]

Google and Symantec clash on website security checks

On March 24, 2017, Google stated that it had lost confidence in Symantec, after the latest incident of improper certificate issuance.[114][115] Google says millions of existing Symantec certificates will become untrusted in Google Chrome over the next 12 months. According to Google, Symantec partners issued at least 30,000 certificates of questionable validity over several years, but Symantec disputes that number.[116] Google said Symantec failed to comply with industry standards and could not provide audits showing the necessary documentation.[117][118]

Google's Ryan Sleevi said that Symantec partnered with other CAs (CrossCert (Korea Electronic Certificate Authority), Certisign Certificatadora Digital, Certsuperior S. de R. L. de C.V., and Certisur S.A.) who did not follow proper verification procedures leading to the misissuance of certificates.[119]

Following discussions in which Google had required that Symantec migrate Symantec-branded certificate issuance operations a non-Symantec-operated “Managed Partner Infrastructure”,[120] a deal was announced whereby DigiCert acquired Symantec's website security business.[121] In September 2017, Google announced that starting with Chrome 66, "Chrome will remove trust in Symantec-issued certificates issued prior to June 1, 2016".[122] Google further stated that "by December 1, 2017, Symantec will transition issuance and operation of publicly-trusted certificates to DigiCert infrastructure, and certificates issued from the old Symantec infrastructure after this date will not be trusted in Chrome."[122] Google predicted that toward the end of October, 2018, with the release of Chrome 70, the browser would omit all trust in Symantec's old infrastructure and all of the certificates it had issued, affecting most certificates chaining to Symantec roots.[122] Mozilla Firefox planned to distrust Symantec-issued certificates in Firefox 63 (released on October 23, 2018),[123] but delivered the change in Firefox 64 (released on December 11, 2018).[124] Apple has also planned to distrust Symantec root certificates.[125][126] Subsequently, Symantec exited the TLS/SSL segment by selling the SSL unit to Digicert for $950 million in mid 2017.[73]

Columbia patent-infringement lawsuit

In May 2022, Columbia University won $185 million judgement against NortonLifeLock Inc. in a patent-infringement lawsuit.[127] The jury found that Norton willfully infringed the patents related to antivirus fighting malware.[128][129]

See also

References

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External links

  • Official website
  • Business data for Gen Digital Inc.:
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digital, formerly, symantec, corporation, nortonlifelock, multinational, software, company, headquartered, tempe, arizona, prague, czech, republic, company, provides, cybersecurity, software, services, fortune, company, member, stock, market, index, company, a. Gen Digital Inc formerly Symantec Corporation and NortonLifeLock is a multinational software company co headquartered in Tempe Arizona and Prague Czech Republic The company provides cybersecurity software and services Gen is a Fortune 500 company and a member of the S amp P 500 stock market index The company also has development centers in Pune Chennai and Bangalore Its portfolio includes Norton Avast LifeLock Avira AVG ReputationDefender and CCleaner Gen Digital Inc Gen Digital co headquarters in Tempe ArizonaFormerlySymantec Corporation 1982 2019 NortonLifeLock Inc 2019 2022 TypePublicTraded asNasdaq GENS amp P 500 componentIndustryComputer softwareFoundedMarch 1 1982 41 years ago 1982 03 01 in Sunnyvale California U S FounderGary HendrixHeadquartersTempe Arizona U S Prague Czech RepublicArea servedWorldwideKey peopleFrank E Dangeard Chairman Vincent Pilette CEO ProductsCybersecurity softwareBrandsNorton Avast LifeLock Avira AVG ReputationDefender CCleanerServicesComputer securityRevenueUS 2 79 billion 2022 Operating incomeUS 1 01 billion 2022 Net incomeUS 836 million 2022 Total assetsUS 6 94 billion 2022 Total equityUS 93 million 2022 Number of employeesc 2 700 2022 Websitewww wbr gendigital wbr comFootnotes referencesFinancials as of April 1 2022 update 1 On October 9 2014 Symantec declared it would split into two independent publicly traded companies by the end of 2015 One company would focus on security the other on information management On January 29 2016 Symantec sold its information management subsidiary named Veritas Technologies and which Symantec had acquired in 2004 2 to The Carlyle Group 3 On August 9 2019 Broadcom Inc announced they would be acquiring the Enterprise Security software division of Symantec for 10 7 billion and the company became known as NortonLifeLock 4 After completing its merger with Avast in September 2022 the company adopted the name Gen Digital Inc 5 Contents 1 History 1 1 1982 to 1989 1 2 1990 to 1999 1 3 2000 to present 1 4 Demerger 2 Products 2 1 Norton 2 2 Avast 2 3 AVG 2 4 Avira 2 5 Other 3 Mergers and acquisitions 3 1 ACT 3 2 Veritas 3 3 Sygate 3 4 Altiris 3 5 Vontu 3 6 Application Performance Management business 3 7 PC Tools 3 8 AppStream 3 9 MessageLabs 3 10 PGP and GuardianEdge 3 11 Verisign authentication 3 12 Rulespace 3 13 Clearwell Systems 3 14 LiveOffice 3 15 Odyssey Software 3 16 Nukona Inc 3 17 NitroDesk Inc 3 18 Blue Coat Systems 3 19 LifeLock 3 20 Avira 3 21 Avast 4 Security concerns and controversies 4 1 Restatement 4 2 Endpoint bug 4 3 Scan evasion vulnerability 4 4 Denial of service attack vulnerabilities 4 5 Scareware lawsuit 4 6 Source code theft 4 7 Verisign data breach 4 8 pcAnywhere exploit 4 9 Hacking of The New York Times network 4 10 Intellectual Ventures suit 4 11 Sustaining digital certificate security 4 12 Google and Symantec clash on website security checks 4 13 Columbia patent infringement lawsuit 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory1982 to 1989 Logo of Symantec used from 1990 to 2001 Founded in 1982 by Gary Hendrix with a National Science Foundation grant Symantec was originally focused on artificial intelligence related projects including a database program 6 Hendrix hired several Stanford University natural language processing researchers as the company s first employees 6 In 1984 it became clear that the advanced natural language and database system that Symantec had developed could not be ported from DEC minicomputers to the PC 7 This left Symantec without a product but with expertise in natural language database query systems and technology 8 As a result later in 1984 Symantec was acquired by another smaller software startup company C amp E Software founded by Denis Coleman and Gordon Eubanks and headed by Eubanks 8 C amp E Software developed a combined file management and word processing program called Q amp A 8 Barry Greenstein now a professional poker player was the principal developer of the word processor component within Q amp A citation needed The merged company retained the name Symantec 8 Eubanks became its chairman Vern Raburn the former president of the original Symantec remained as president of the combined company 9 The new Symantec combined the file management and word processing functionality that C amp E had planned and added an advanced Natural Language query system designed by Gary Hendrix and engineered by Dan Gordon that set new standards for ease of database query and report generation The natural language system was named The Intelligent Assistant Turner chose the name of Q amp A for Symantec s flagship product in large part because the name lent itself to use in a short easily merchandised logo Brett Walter designed the user interface of Q amp A Brett Walter director of product management Q amp A was released in November 1985 In 1986 Vern Raburn and Gordon Eubanks swapped roles and Eubanks became CEO and president of Symantec while Raburn became its chairman 10 After this change Raburn had little involvement with Symantec and in a few years Eubanks added chairmanship to his other roles citation needed After a slow start for sales of Q amp A in the fall of 1985 and spring of 1986 Rod Turner a Symantec Sr Executive signed up a new advertising agency called Elliott Dickens embarked on an aggressive new advertising campaign and came up with the Six Pack Program in which all Symantec employees regardless of role went on the road training and selling nationwide in the United States Turner named it Six Pack because employees were to work six days a week see six dealerships per day train six sales representatives per store and stay with friends free or at Motel 6 11 Simultaneously a promotion was run jointly with SofSell which was Symantec s exclusive wholesale distributor in the United States for the first year that Q amp A was on the market This promotion was very successful in encouraging dealers to try Q amp A During this time Symantec was advised by its board members Jim Lally and John Doerr that if it would cut its expenses and grow revenues enough to achieve cash flow break even then Kleiner Perkins Caufield amp Byers would back the company in raising more venture capital To accomplish this the management team worked out a salary reduction schedule where the chairman and the CEO would take zero pay all vice presidents would take a 50 pay cut and all other employees pay was cut by 15 Two employees were laid off Eubanks also negotiated a sizable rent reduction on the office space the company had leased in the days of the original Symantec These expense reductions combined with strong international sales of Q amp A enabled the company to attain break even The significantly increased traction for Q amp A from this re launch grew Symantec s revenues substantially along with early success for Q amp A in international markets uniquely a German version was shipped three weeks after the United States version and it was the first software in the world that supported German Natural Language following Turner s having emphasized establishing international sales distribution and multiple language versions of Q amp A from the initial shipment In 1985 Rod Turner negotiated the publishing agreement with David Whitney for Symantec s second product which Turner named NoteIt an annotation utility for Lotus 1 2 3 It was evident to Turner that NoteIt would confuse the dealer channel if it was launched under the Symantec name because Symantec had built up interest by that stage in Q amp A but not yet shipped it and because the low price for the utility would not be initially attracted to the dealer channel until demand had been built up Turner felt that the product should be marketed under a unique brand name Turner and Gordon E Eubanks Jr then chairman of Symantec Corporation agreed to form a new division of Symantec and Eubanks delegated the choice of name to Turner Turner chose the name Turner Hall Publishing to be a new division of Symantec devoted to publishing third party software and hardware The objective of the division was to diversify revenues and accelerate the growth of Symantec Turner chose the name Turner Hall Publishing using his last name and that of Dottie Hall Director of Marketing Communications to convey the sense of a stable long established company 12 13 Turner Hall Publishing s first offering was Note It a notation utility add in for Lotus 1 2 3 which was developed by David Whitney and licensed to Symantec 14 15 Its second product was the Turner Hall Card which was a 256k RAM half slot memory card initially made to inexpensively increase the available memory for Symantec s flagship product Q amp A The Turner Hall division also marketed the card as a standalone product Turner Hall s third product also a 1 2 3 add in was SQZ a Lotus 1 2 3 spreadsheet compression utility developed by Chris Graham Synex Systems 16 In the summer of 1986 Eubanks and Turner recruited Tom Byers from Digital Research to expand the Turner Hall Publishing product family and lead the Turner Hall effort By the winter of 1986 87 the Turner Hall Publishing division had achieved success with NoteIt the Turner Hall Card and SQZ The popularity of these products while contributing a relatively small portion of revenues to Symantec conveyed the impression that Symantec was already a diversified company and indeed many industry participants were under the impression that Symantec had acquired Turner Hall Publishing In 1987 Byers recruited Ted Schlein into the Turner Hall Product Group to assist in building the product family and in marketing Revenues from Q amp A and Symantec s early launch into the international marketplace combined with Turner Hall Publishing generated the market presence and scale that enabled Symantec to make its first merger acquisition in February 1987 that of Breakthrough Software maker of the TimeLine project management software for DOS Because this was the first time that Symantec had acquired a business that had revenues inventory and customers Eubanks chose to change nothing at BreakThrough Software for six months and the actual merger logistics started in the summer of 1987 with Turner being appointed by Eubanks as general manager of the TimeLine business unit Turner was made responsible for the successful integration of the company into Symantec and ongoing growth of the business with P amp L There was a heavy emphasis placed on making the minimum disruption by Eubanks and Turner Soon after the acquisition of TimeLine Breakthrough Software Eubanks reorganized Symantec structuring the company around product centric groups each having its development quality assurance technical support and product marketing functions and a general manager with profit and loss responsibility Sales finance and operations were centralized functions that were shared This structure lent itself well to Symantec s further growth through mergers and acquisitions Eubanks made Turner general manager of the new TimeLine Product Group and simultaneously of the Q amp A Product Group and made Tom Byers general manager of the Turner Hall Product Group Turner continued to build and lead the company s international business and marketing for the whole company At the TimeLine Product Group Turner drove strong marketing promotion and sales programs to accelerate momentum By 1989 this merger was very successful product group morale was high TimeLine development continued apace and the increased sales and marketing efforts applied built the TimeLine into the clear market lead in PC project management software on DOS Both the Q amp A and TimeLine product groups were healthily profitable The profit stream and merger success set the stage for subsequent merger and acquisition activity by the company and indeed funded the losses of some of the product groups that were subsequently acquired 12 In 1989 Eubanks hired John Laing as VP worldwide sales and Turner transferred the international division to Laing Eubanks also recruited Bob Dykes to be executive vice president for operations and finance in anticipation of the upcoming IPO On June 23 1989 Symantec had its IPO 17 1990 to 1999 In May 1990 Symantec announced its intent to merge with and acquire Peter Norton Computing a developer of various utilities for DOS Turner was appointed as product group manager for the Norton business and made responsible for the merger with P amp L responsibility Ted Schlein was made product group manager for the Q amp A business The Peter Norton group merger logistical effort began immediately while the companies sought approval for the merger and in August 1990 Symantec concluded the purchase by this time the combination of the companies was already complete Symantec s consumer antivirus and data management utilities are still marketed under the Norton name At the time of the merger Symantec had built upon its Turner Hall Publishing presence in the utility market by introducing Symantec Antivirus for the Macintosh SAM and Symantec Utilities for the Macintosh SUM These two products were already market leaders on the Mac and this success made the Norton merger more strategic Symantec had already begun the development of a DOS based antivirus program one year before the merger with Norton The management team had decided to enter the antivirus market in part because it was felt that the antivirus market entailed a great deal of ongoing work to stay ahead of new viruses The team felt that Microsoft would be unlikely to find this effort attractive which would lengthen the viability of the market for Symantec Turner decided to use the Norton name for obvious reasons on what became the Norton Antivirus which Turner and the Norton team launched in 1991 At the time of the merger Norton revenues were approximately 20 to 25 of the combined entity By 1993 while being led by Turner Norton product group revenues had grown to approximately 82 of Symantec s total At one time Symantec was also known for its development tools particularly the THINK Pascal THINK C Symantec C Enterprise Developer and Visual Cafe packages that were popular on the Macintosh and IBM PC compatible platforms These product lines resulted from acquisitions made by the company in the late 1980s and early 1990s These businesses and the Living Videotext acquisition were consistently unprofitable for Symantec and these losses diverted expenditures away from both the Q amp A for Windows and the TimeLine for Windows development efforts during the critical period from 1988 through 1992 Symantec exited this business in the late 1990s as competitors such as Metrowerks Microsoft and Borland gained significant market share In 1996 Symantec Corporation was alleged of misleading financial statements in violation of GAAP 18 2000 to present Symantec sponsored Porsche 997 GT3 Cup competing at the 2012 Petit Le Mans From 1999 to April 2009 Symantec was led by CEO John W Thompson a former VP at IBM At the time Thompson was the only African American leading a major US technology company He was succeeded in April 2009 by the company s long time Symantec executive Enrique Salem 19 Under Salem Symantec completed the acquisition of Verisign s Certificate Authority business dramatically increasing their share of that market Logo of Symantec used from 2001 to 2010 In 2009 Symantec released a list of the then 100 dirtiest websites which contain the most malware as detected by Norton Safe Web 20 21 Former Symantec headquarters in Mountain View California Salem was abruptly fired in 2012 for disappointing earnings performance and replaced by Steve Bennett a former CEO of Intuit and GE executive 22 In January 2013 Bennett announced a major corporate reorganization with the goal of reducing costs and improving Symantec s product line He said that sales and marketing had been high costs but did not provide quality outcomes He concluded that Our system is just broken 23 Robert Enderle of CIO com reviewed the reorganization and noted that Bennett was following the General Electric model of being product focused instead of customer focused He concluded Eliminating middle management removes a large number of highly paid employees This will tactically improve Symantec s bottom line but reduce the skills needed to ensure high quality products in the long term 24 In March 2014 Symantec fired Steve Bennett from his CEO position and named Michael Brown as interim president and chief executive Including the interim CEO Symantec has had 3 CEOs in less than two years 25 26 On September 25 2014 Symantec announced the appointment of Michael A Brown as its president and chief executive officer 27 Brown had served as the company s interim president and chief executive officer since March 20 2014 28 Mr Brown has served as a member of the company s board of directors since July 2005 following the acquisition of VERITAS Software Corporation Mr Brown had served on the VERITAS board of directors since 2003 29 In July 2016 Symantec introduced a product to help carmakers protect connected vehicles against zero day attacks The Symantec Anomaly Detection for Automotive is an IoT product for manufacturers and uses machine learning to provide in vehicle security analytics 30 Greg Clark assumed the position of CEO in August 2016 31 In November 2016 Symantec announced its intent to acquire identity theft protection company LifeLock for 2 3 billion 32 In August 2017 Symantec announced that it had agreed to sell its business unit that verifies the identity of websites to Thoma Bravo With this acquisition Thoma Bravo plans to merge the Symantec business unit with its own web certification company DigiCert 33 On January 4 2018 Symantec and BT formerly British Telecom announced their partnership that provides new endpoint security protection 34 In May 2018 Symantec initiated an internal audit to address concerns raised by a former employee 35 36 causing it to delay its annual earnings report 37 In August 2018 Symantec announced that the hedge fund Starboard Value had put forward five nominees to stand for election to the Symantec board of directors at Symantec s 2018 Annual Meeting of Stockholders 38 This followed a Schedule 13D filing by Starboard showing that it had accumulated a 5 8 stake in Symantec 39 In September 2018 Symantec announced that three nominees of Starboard were joining the Symantec board two with immediate effect including Starboard Managing Member Peter Feld and one following the 2018 Annual Meeting of Stockholders 40 On May 9 2019 Symantec announced that Clark would be stepping down and that board member Rick Hill previously put forward by Starboard had been appointed interim president and CEO 41 Vincent Pilette also joined Symantec as its new CFO 42 Logo of NortonLifeLock from 2019 until 2022 On August 9 2019 Broadcom announced they would be acquiring the Enterprise software division of Symantec for 10 7 billion This is after having attempted to purchase the whole company The Norton family of products will remain in the Symantec portfolio The sale closed on November 4 2019 and subsequently the company adopted the NortonLifeLock name and relocated its headquarters from Mountain View California to LifeLock s offices in Tempe Arizona 4 43 In 2021 a crypto miner was added to the Norton 360 product called Norton Crypto Once activated by the user Norton Crypto mines Ethereum ETH using the installed machine s graphics card while idle The program also creates a secure wallet on the same machine 44 45 Norton announced it was permanently disabling the feature on September 14 2022 due to the Ethereum merge 46 Demerger Main article Veritas Technologies On October 9 2014 Symantec declared that the company would separate into two independent publicly traded companies by the end of 2015 47 Symantec will continue to focus on security while a new company will be established focusing on information management Symantec confirmed on January 28 2015 that the information management business would be called Veritas Technologies Corporation marking a return of the Veritas name 48 In August 2015 Symantec agreed to sell Veritas to a private equity group led by The Carlyle Group for 8 billion The sale was completed by February 2016 turning Veritas into a privately owned company 49 ProductsNorton Main article Norton software Norton product line includes Norton AntiVirus Norton Security Norton Small Business Norton Family Norton Mobile Security Norton Online Backup Norton 360 Norton Utilities and Norton Computer Tune Up citation needed Norton s line also includes LifeLock and ReputationDefender In 2012 PCTools iAntiVirus was rebranded as a Norton product under the name iAntivirus and released to the Mac App Store Also in 2012 the Norton Partner Portal was relaunched to support sales to consumers throughout the EMEA technologies citation needed Avast Main article Avast Avast product line includes Avast Antivirus Avast Premium Security Avast Cleanup Avast Secure Browser and Avast SecureLine VPN As of 2017 it is the most popular antivirus vendor on the market and it had the largest market share 50 AVG Main article AVG Technologies AVG product line includes AVG AntiVirus AVG Internet Security AVG Secure VPN AVG PC TuneUp and AVG Driver Updater Previously a publicly company in February 2012 it was acquired by Avast in July 2016 for 1 3 billion 51 Avira Main article Avira Avira product line includes Avira Free Security Avira Internet Security Avira Prime and Avira Phantom VPN Other Other products offered by Gen Digital include CCleaner Recuva Speccy Defraggler HMA and SONAR Mergers and acquisitionsMain article List of mergers and acquisitions by Gen Digital ACT In 1993 Symantec acquired ACT from Contact Software International Symantec sold ACT to SalesLogix in 1999 At the time it was the world s most popular CRM application for Windows and Macintosh 52 Veritas On December 16 2004 Veritas Software and Symantec announced their plans for a merger With Veritas valued at 13 5 billion it was the largest software industry merger to date 53 Symantec s shareholders voted to approve the merger on June 24 2005 the deal closed successfully on July 2 2005 54 July 5 2005 was the first day of business for the U S offices of the new combined software company As a result of this merger Symantec includes storage and availability related products in its portfolio namely Veritas File System VxFS Veritas Volume Manager VxVM Veritas Volume Replicator VVR Veritas Cluster Server VCS NetBackup NBU Backup Exec BE and Enterprise Vault EV citation needed On January 29 2016 Symantec sold Veritas Technologies to The Carlyle Group 2 Sygate On August 16 2005 Symantec acquired Sygate 55 a security software firm based in Fremont California with about 200 staff 56 As of November 30 2005 all Sygate personal firewall products were discontinued 57 Altiris On January 29 2007 Symantec announced plans to acquire Altiris 58 and on April 6 2007 the acquisition was completed 59 Altiris specializes in service oriented management software that allows organizations to manage IT assets 58 It also provides software for web services security and systems management products Established in 1998 Altiris is headquartered in Lindon Utah 60 Vontu On November 5 2007 Symantec announced its acquisition of Vontu a Data Loss Prevention DLP company for 350 million 61 Application Performance Management business On January 17 2008 Symantec announced 62 that it was spinning off its Application Performance Management APM business and the i3 product line to Vector Capital 63 Precise Software Solutions took over development product management marketing and sales for the APM business launching as an independent company on September 17 2008 64 PC Tools On August 18 2008 Symantec announced the signing of an agreement to acquire PC Tools Under the agreement PC Tools would maintain separate operations The financial terms of the acquisition were not disclosed In May 2013 Symantec announced they were discontinuing the PC Tools line of internet security software 65 In December 2013 Symantec announced they were discontinuing and retiring the entire PC Tools brand and offering a non expiring license to PC Tools Performance Toolkit PC Tools Registry Mechanic PC Tools File Recover and PC Tools Privacy Guardian users with an active subscription as of December 4 2013 66 AppStream On April 18 2008 Symantec completed the acquisition of AppStream Inc AppStream a nonpublic Palo Alto California based provider of endpoint virtualization software AppStream was acquired to complement Symantec s endpoint management and virtualization portfolio and strategy 67 MessageLabs On October 9 2008 Symantec announced its intent to acquire Gloucester based MessageLabs spun off from Star Internet in 2007 to boost its Software as a Service SaaS business Symantec purchased the online messaging and Web security provider for about 695 million in cash 68 The acquisition closed on November 17 2008 69 PGP and GuardianEdge On April 29 2010 Symantec announced its intent to acquire PGP Corporation and GuardianEdge 70 The acquisitions closed on June 4 2010 and provided access to established encryption key management and technologies to Symantec s customers citation needed Verisign authentication Logo of Symantec used from 2010 to 2019 adopting Verisign s stylistic V On May 19 2010 Symantec signed a definitive agreement to acquire Verisign s authentication business unit which included the Secure Sockets Layer SSL Certificate Public Key Infrastructure PKI Verisign Trust and Verisign Identity Protection VIP authentication services 71 The acquisition closed on August 9 2010 In August 2012 Symantec completed its rebranding of the Verisign SSL Certificate Service by renaming the Verisign Trust Seal the Norton Secured Seal 72 Symantec sold the SSL unit to Digicert for US 950 million in mid 2017 73 Rulespace Acquired on October 10 2010 RuleSpace is a web categorisation product first developed in 1996 74 The categorisation is automated using what Symantec refers to as the Automated Categorization System ACS It is used as the base for content filtering by many UK ISP citation needed Clearwell Systems On May 19 2011 Symantec announced the acquisition of Clearwell Systems for approximately 390 million 75 LiveOffice On January 17 2012 Symantec announced the acquisition of cloud email archiving company LiveOffice The acquisition price was 115 million 76 Last year ambiguous Symantec joined the cloud storage and backup sector with its Enterprise Vault cloud and Cloud Storage for Enterprise Vault software in addition to a cloud messaging software Symantec Instant Messaging Security cloud IMS cloud citation needed Symantec stated that the acquisition would add to its information governance products 76 77 allowing customers to store information on premises in Symantec s data centers or both Odyssey Software On March 2 2012 Symantec completed the acquisition of Odyssey Software Odyssey Software s main product was Athena which was device management software that extended Microsoft System Center software adding the ability to manage support and control mobile and embedded devices such as smartphones and ruggedized handhelds 55 78 Nukona Inc Symantec completed its acquisition of Nukona a provider of mobile application management MAM on April 2 2012 79 The acquisition agreement between Symantec and Nukona was announced on March 20 2012 80 NitroDesk Inc In May 2014 Symantec acquired NitroDesk provider of TouchDown the market leading third party EAS mobile application 81 Blue Coat Systems On June 13 2016 it was announced that Symantec had acquired Blue Coat for 4 65 billion 82 LifeLock In 2017 Symantec acquired LifeLock Inc 83 84 this in turn prompted the company to rename itself to NortonLifeLock in 2019 Avira Norton LifeLock acquired German security firm Avira in December 2020 for 360 million 85 Avast In August 2021 Norton agreed to merge with Czech cybersecurity software company Avast The UK Competition and Markets Authority formally cleared the 8 1 billion merger on September 2 2022 86 Security concerns and controversiesRestatement On August 9 2004 the company announced that it discovered an error in its calculation of deferred revenue which represented an accumulated adjustment of 20 million 87 88 Endpoint bug The arrival of the year 2010 triggered a bug in Symantec Endpoint Symantec reported that malware and intrusion protection updates with a date greater than December 31 2009 11 59 pm were considered to be out of date The company created and distributed a workaround for the issue 89 Scan evasion vulnerability In March 2010 it was reported that Symantec AntiVirus and Symantec Client Security were prone to a vulnerability that might allow an attacker to bypass on demand virus scanning and permit malicious files to escape detection 90 91 citation needed Denial of service attack vulnerabilities In January 2011 multiple vulnerabilities in Symantec products that could be exploited by a denial of service attack and thereby compromise a system were reported The products involved were Symantec AntiVirus Corporate Edition Server and Symantec System Center 92 The November 12 2012 Vulnerability Bulletin of the United States Computer Emergency Readiness Team US CERT reported the following vulnerability for older versions of Symantec s Antivirus system The decomposer engine in Symantec Endpoint Protection SEP 11 0 Symantec Endpoint Protection Small Business Edition 12 0 Symantec AntiVirus Corporate Edition SAVCE 10 x and Symantec Scan Engine SSE before 5 2 8 does not properly perform bounds checks of the contents of CAB archives which allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service application crash or possibly execute arbitrary code via a crafted file 93 The problem relates to older versions of the systems and a patch is available US CERT rated the seriousness of this vulnerability as a 9 7 on a 10 point scale The decomposer engine is a component of the scanning system that opens containers such as compressed files so that the scanner can evaluate the files within citation needed Scareware lawsuit In January 2012 James Gross filed a lawsuit against Symantec for distributing fake scareware scanners that purportedly alerted users of issues with their computers Gross claimed that after the scan only some of the errors and problems were corrected and he was prompted by the scanner to purchase a Symantec app to remove the rest Gross claimed that he bought the app but it did not speed up his computer or remove the detected viruses He hired a digital forensics expert to back up this claim Symantec denied the allegations and said that it would contest the case 94 Symantec settled a 11 million fund up to 9 to more than 1 million eligible customers representing the overpaid amount for the app and the case was dismissed in court 95 96 Source code theft On January 17 2012 Symantec disclosed that its network had been hacked A hacker known as Yama Tough had obtained the source code for some Symantec software by hacking an Indian government server 97 Yama Tough released parts of the code and threatened to release more According to Chris Paden a Symantec spokesman the source code that was taken was for Enterprise products that were between five and six years old 97 On September 25 2012 an affiliate of the hacker group Anonymous published source code from Norton Utilities 98 Symantec confirmed that it was part of the code that had been stolen earlier and that the leak included code for 2006 versions of Norton Utilities pcAnywhere and Norton Antivirus 98 Verisign data breach In February 2012 it was reported that Verisign s network and data had been hacked repeatedly in 2010 but that the breaches had not been disclosed publicly until they were noted in an SEC filing in October 2011 99 Verisign did not provide information about whether the breach included its certificate authority business which was acquired by Symantec in late 2010 99 Oliver Lavery director of security and research for nCircle asked rhetorically Can we trust any site using Verisign SSL certificates Without more clarity the logical answer is no 100 101 pcAnywhere exploit On February 17 2012 details of an exploit of pcAnywhere were posted The exploit would allow attackers to crash pcAnywhere on computers running Windows 102 Symantec released a hotfix for the issue twelve days later 103 Hacking of The New York Times network According to Mandiant Symantec security products used by The New York Times detected only one of 45 pieces of malware that were installed by Chinese hackers on the newspaper s network during three months in late 2012 104 105 Symantec responded Advanced attacks like the ones the New York Times described in the following article lt http nyti ms TZtr5z gt underscore how important it is for companies countries and consumers to make sure they are using the full capability of security solutions The advanced capabilities in our E ndpoint offerings including our unique reputation based technology and behavior based blocking specifically target sophisticated attacks Turning on only the signature based anti virus components of E ndpoint solutions alone is not enough in a world that is changing daily from attacks and threats We encourage customers to be very aggressive in deploying solutions that offer a combined approach to security Anti virus software alone is not enough 106 Intellectual Ventures suit In February 2015 Symantec was found guilty of two counts of patent infringement in a suit by Intellectual Ventures Inc and ordered to pay 17 million in compensation and damages 107 In September 2016 this decision was reversed on appeal by the Federal Circuit 108 109 Sustaining digital certificate security On September 18 2015 Google notified Symantec that the latter issued 23 test certificates for five organizations including Google and Opera without the domain owners knowledge 110 Symantec performed another audit and announced that an additional 164 test certificates were mis issued for 76 domains and 2 458 test certificates were mis issued for domains that had never been registered Google requested that Symantec update the public incident report with proven analysis explaining the details on each of the failures 111 The company was asked to report all the certificates issued to the Certificate Transparency log henceforth 112 113 Symantec has since reported implementing Certificate Transparency for all its SSL Certificates Above all Google has insisted that Symantec execute a security audit by a third party and to maintain tamper proof security audit logs 112 Google and Symantec clash on website security checks On March 24 2017 Google stated that it had lost confidence in Symantec after the latest incident of improper certificate issuance 114 115 Google says millions of existing Symantec certificates will become untrusted in Google Chrome over the next 12 months According to Google Symantec partners issued at least 30 000 certificates of questionable validity over several years but Symantec disputes that number 116 Google said Symantec failed to comply with industry standards and could not provide audits showing the necessary documentation 117 118 Google s Ryan Sleevi said that Symantec partnered with other CAs CrossCert Korea Electronic Certificate Authority Certisign Certificatadora Digital Certsuperior S de R L de C V and Certisur S A who did not follow proper verification procedures leading to the misissuance of certificates 119 Following discussions in which Google had required that Symantec migrate Symantec branded certificate issuance operations a non Symantec operated Managed Partner Infrastructure 120 a deal was announced whereby DigiCert acquired Symantec s website security business 121 In September 2017 Google announced that starting with Chrome 66 Chrome will remove trust in Symantec issued certificates issued prior to June 1 2016 122 Google further stated that by December 1 2017 Symantec will transition issuance and operation of publicly trusted certificates to DigiCert infrastructure and certificates issued from the old Symantec infrastructure after this date will not be trusted in Chrome 122 Google predicted that toward the end of October 2018 with the release of Chrome 70 the browser would omit all trust in Symantec s old infrastructure and all of the certificates it had issued affecting most certificates chaining to Symantec roots 122 Mozilla Firefox planned to distrust Symantec issued certificates in Firefox 63 released on October 23 2018 123 but delivered the change in Firefox 64 released on December 11 2018 124 Apple has also planned to distrust Symantec root certificates 125 126 Subsequently Symantec exited the TLS SSL segment by selling the SSL unit to Digicert for 950 million in mid 2017 73 Columbia patent infringement lawsuit In May 2022 Columbia University won 185 million judgement against NortonLifeLock Inc in a patent infringement lawsuit 127 The jury found that Norton willfully infringed the patents related to antivirus fighting malware 128 129 See also Companies portal San Francisco Bay Area portalComparison of antivirus software Comparison of computer viruses Huawei Symantec a joint venture between Huawei and Symantec Web blocking in the United Kingdom Technologies Symantec behavior analysis technologies SONAR and AntiBot Symantec Online BackupReferences FY2022 Annual Report U S Securities and Exchange Commission May 20 2022 pp 9 40 41 a b Bray Chad August 11 2015 Carlyle Group and Other Investors to Acquire Veritas Technologies for 8 Billion The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 21 2020 Kuranda Sarah January 29 2016 Partners Cheer the Official Closing Date of Symantec Split CRN Retrieved February 21 2016 a b Cyber security firm headquarters moved to Arizona selling 10 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20 2012 Retrieved June 11 2013 Parrish Kevin August 21 2009 Symantec Lists 100 Dirtiest Websites Tom s Guide Collins Barry November 30 2009 Symantec reveals the 100 dirtiest sites on the web Alphr Finkle Jim July 25 2012 Symantec fires CEO successor begins turnaround effort Reuters Retrieved July 11 2013 Messmer Ellen January 24 2013 Symantec CEO on reorg our system is just broken Computerworld Retrieved June 7 2015 Enderle Rob January 25 2013 Symantec Reorganization Offers a Lesson on Knowing When to Leave CIO Archived from the original on October 22 2013 Retrieved June 7 2015 Schwartz Mathew March 21 2004 Symantec Fires CEO In Surprise Move Dark Reading Retrieved June 7 2015 Yadron Danny Lublin Joann S March 20 2014 Symantec Fires CEO Steve Bennett Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved April 16 2017 Stynes Tess September 25 2014 Symantec Appoints Brown as CEO Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved May 29 2017 UPDATE 2 Symantec fires CEO Bennett Reuters March 20 2014 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investigation Reuters May 10 2018 Retrieved September 13 2018 Symantec Confirms Receipt of Director Nominations http investor symantec com About Investors press releases press release details 2018 Symantec Confirms Receipt of Director Nominations default aspx Balu Nivedita and Panchadar Arjun Starboard eyes Symantec board seats after taking stake Reuters Technology News August 16 2018 https www reuters com article us symantec starboard stake starboard eyes symantec board seats after taking stake idUSKBN1L10EN RaiBalu Sonam Symantec names three Starboard nominees to board Business News September 17 2018 https www reuters com article us symantec starboard symantec appoints starboards peter feld to its board idUSKCN1LX2EW Symantec Announces Leadership Changes https investor symantec com About Investors press releases press release details 2019 Symantec Announces Leadership Changes default aspx Symantec and Starboard Announce Board Refreshment Plan and Director Appointments https investor symantec com About Investors press releases press release details 2018 Symantec and Starboard Announce Board Refreshment Plan and Director Appointments default aspx Wiles Russ Cybersecurity company now based in Tempe pays special 8 billion dividend azcentral Retrieved May 23 2020 Norton 360 Now Comes With a Cryptominer Krebs on Security Retrieved January 30 2022 Clark Mitchell January 7 2022 Here s the truth about the crypto miner that comes with Norton Antivirus The Verge Retrieved August 23 2022 NortonLifeLock to End Antivirus Crypto Mining Due to Ethereum Merge PCMAG Retrieved September 21 2022 Symantec latest company to split in two BBC News October 10 2014 Retrieved February 17 2015 Brown Michael New Veritas Name Blends our History and Vision for Tomorrow s Data Challenges Symantec Retrieved January 28 2015 Corporate press release Symantec and Veritas separation PDF archived from the original PDF on November 30 2016 retrieved February 15 2016 AVAST Software s r o Private Company 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acquire Altiris in 830 mln deal Reuters Retrieved March 25 2017 Symantec Completes Acquisition of Altiris PC World press release April 10 2007 Retrieved March 25 2017 Computerworld in German IDG Enterprise February 3 1997 p 69 Retrieved May 29 2017 UPDATE 1 Symantec says to acquire Vontu for 350 million Reuters November 5 2007 Retrieved March 25 2017 Symantec to Sell Application Performance Management Business to Vector Capital Symantec com Archived from the original on December 30 2008 Retrieved November 9 2010 Dubie Denise January 18 2008 Symantec dumps application performance management business Network World Retrieved April 16 2017 The new Precise to redefine application performance management precise com Archived from the original on September 28 2010 Retrieved April 7 2011 Download PC Performance amp Computer Registry Software PC Tools by Symantec Pctools com May 18 2013 Retrieved July 11 2013 Download PC Performance amp Computer Registry Software PC Tools by Symantec Pctools com 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Peter August 3 2017 How Symantec solved browser trust issue for its SSL certificates CSO Online Retrieved May 23 2020 Kaplan Dan October 20 2010 Symantec buys RuleSpace for URL filtering technology SC Magazine US Retrieved March 25 2017 Symantec buys data experts Clearwell for 390 million Reuters May 19 2011 Archived from the original on March 26 2017 Retrieved March 25 2017 a b Dignan Larry January 17 2012 Symantec picks up LiveOffice for 115 million bolsters cloud archiving ZDNet Retrieved March 25 2017 Kirk Jeremy January 16 2012 Symantec Acquires LiveOffice Cloud Based Archiving Company CIO Retrieved April 16 2017 Howley Daniel P July 17 2012 Symantec Beefs Up Enterprise Mobile Security Offerings Laptop Mag Retrieved April 16 2017 Symantec Completes Acquisition of Nukona Symantec April 16 2012 Archived from the original on March 26 2017 Retrieved March 25 2017 Messmer Ellen March 20 2012 Symantec to acquire Nukona to assist in BYOD strategy Network World Retrieved March 25 2017 Kirk Jeremy May 28 2014 Symantec acquires NitroDesk for email security on Android PCWorld Retrieved March 25 2017 McMillan Robert Cimilluca Dana June 13 2016 Symantec Set to Buy Blue Coat Systems in 4 65 Billion Deal Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved June 13 2016 Molina Brett Symantec to acquire LifeLock for 2 3B USA Today No 2016 11 21 Retrieved November 21 2016 Symantec completes acquisition of Tempe s LifeLock for 2 3B www bizjournals com Retrieved November 14 2019 Lunden Ingrid December 7 2020 NortonLifeLock acquires Avira in 360M all cash deal 8 months after Avira was acquired for 180M TechCrunch Retrieved October 24 2022 Sawers Paul September 2 2022 UK clears 8 1B merger between NortonLifeLock and Avast TechCrunch Retrieved September 21 2022 Technology Briefing Software Symantec Cuts Profit On Accounting Error The New York Times Bloomberg News August 10 2004 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 16 2017 McMillan Robert August 10 2004 Symantec lowers earnings results after software glitch Computerworld Retrieved April 16 2017 Greene Tim January 6 2010 Is It Y2K All Over Again in 2010 PCWorld Retrieved April 16 2017 Symantec AntiVirus Scan Evasion Vulnerability Retrieved June 7 2015 Security Advisories Relating to Symantec Products Symantec Event Manipulation Potential Scan Bypass Retrieved June 7 2015 Multiple vulnerabilities in Symantec products HelpNet Security January 27 2011 Retrieved June 7 2015 Vulnerability Summary for the Week of November 12 2012 US CERT United States Computer Emergency Readiness Team Retrieved June 7 2015 Yin Sara January 12 2012 Symantec Sued for Scareware Tactics PC Magazine Ziff Davis Retrieved February 10 2012 McLernon Sean March 18 2013 Symantec Inks 11M Deal Ending Claims It Used Scare Tactics Law360 Portfolio Media Breyer Charles R July 31 2012 Filing 49 Order by Judge Charles R Breyer granting 38 Motion to Dismiss Gross v Symantec Corporation via Justia Dockets amp Filings a b Keizer Gregg January 17 2012 Symantec backtracks admits own network hacked Computerworld Retrieved February 10 2012 a b Constantin Lucian September 25 2012 Symantec Leaked Norton Utilities 2006 source code already published months ago PCWorld Retrieved April 16 2017 a b Menn Joseph February 2 2012 Key Internet operator VeriSign hit by hackers Reuters Retrieved April 16 2017 Bradley Tony February 2 2012 VeriSign Hacked What We Don t Know Might Hurt Us PCWorld Retrieved June 7 2015 Albanesius Chloe VeriSign Hacked Multiple Times in 2010 PC Magazine Keizer Gregg February 23 2012 pcAnywhere exploit hackers could hijack 200 000 Windows PCs ComputerworldUK Retrieved April 16 2017 Claims by Anonymous about Symantec Source Code Symantec Archived from the original on September 24 2015 Retrieved September 18 2013 Perlroth Nicole January 31 2013 Hackers in China Attacked The Times for Last 4 Months The New York Times Retrieved June 10 2013 Perlroth Nicole January 30 2013 Hackers in China Attacked The Times for Last 4 Months The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 21 2020 Symantec Statement Regarding New York Times Cyber Attack Symantec Official blog Robinson Teri Symantec to pay 17M in damages for patent violations SC Magazine Retrieved June 7 2015 Roberts Jeff John October 3 2016 Here s Why Software Patents Are in Peril After the Intellectual Ventures Ruling Fortune Magazine Retrieved October 5 2016 Crouch Dennis October 2 2016 First Amendment Finally Reaches Patent Law PatentlyO Retrieved October 5 2016 Goodin Dan October 29 2015 Still fuming over HTTPS mishap Google makes Symantec an offer it can t refuse Ars Technica Retrieved April 16 2017 Google threatens action against Symantec issued SSL certificates following botched investigation PCWorld Retrieved October 3 2017 a b Constantin Lucian October 29 2015 Google threatens action against Symantec issued SSL certificates following botched investigation PCWorld Retrieved April 16 2017 Google slams Symantec over Certificate Transparency trouble SearchSecurity April 16 2017 Retrieved April 16 2017 Constantin Lucian March 24 2017 To punish Symantec Google may distrust a third of the web s SSL certificates PC World Retrieved March 24 2017 Farinas Rafael March 26 2017 Symantec loses Google s trust over fishy SSL Certificates The USB Port Retrieved March 26 2017 To punish Symantec Google may distrust a third of the web s SSL certificates PC World Retrieved April 16 2017 Goodin Dan March 24 2017 Google takes Symantec to the woodshed for mis issuing 30 000 HTTPS certs Ars Technica Retrieved March 24 2017 Cimpanu Catalin Google Reducing Trust in Symantec Certificates Following Numerous Slip Ups Bleeping Computer Retrieved March 24 2017 Conger Kate March 27 2017 Google is fighting with Symantec over encrypting the internet TechCrunch Retrieved March 24 2017 Fisher Darin July 27 2017 Re blink dev Intent to Deprecate and Remove Trust in existing Symantec issued Certificates blink dev chromium org Google Group Merrill John August 2 2017 DigiCert to Acquire Symantec s Website Security Business DigiCert a b c O Brien Devon Sleevi Ryan Whalley Andrew September 11 2017 Chrome s Plan to Distrust Symantec Certificates Google Security Blog Thayer Wayne July 30 2018 Update on the Distrust of Symantec TLS Certificates Mozilla Security Blog Retrieved August 15 2018 Firefox 64 for developers MDN Web Docs Retrieved December 11 2018 Information for website operators about distrusting Symantec certificate authorities Apple Support August 1 2018 Lynch Vincent June 7 2018 Our Latest Symantec Distrust Guidance DigiCert Blog Valbrun Marjorie May 4 2022 Columbia Awarded 185 Million in Patent Infringement Lawsuit Inside Higher Ed Retrieved May 7 2022 Yasiejko Christopher May 2 2022 Norton Owes Columbia 185 Million Over Antivirus Patents Bloomberg Law Retrieved May 7 2022 Brittain Blake May 2 2022 Jury says NortonLifeLock owes Columbia U 185 million over cybersecurity patents Reuters Retrieved May 7 2022 External linksOfficial website 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