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Barracuda Networks was founded in 2003 by CEO Dean Drako, Michael Perone, and Zach Levow; the company introduced the Barracuda Spam and Virus Firewall in the same year. [1] In 2007, the company moved its headquarters to Campbell, California , [ 2 ] and opened an office in Ann Arbor, Michigan .
Drako executed six acquisitions by Barracuda Networks: In 2007, NetContinuum, an application controller company; [21] in 2008, BitLeap, a provider of cloud-based backup services, [22] and 3SP, an SSL and VPN company; [23] in 2009, Yosemite Technologies, for incremental backup of applications; [24] a controlling interest in phion AG, an Austria ...
Image & File Based backups, data de-duplication, block-level and multiple cloud providers supported. CloudJuncxion Decentralized multi-cloud backup with integrated sharing, sync, backup, and Cloud NAS. Fault-tolerance against failure of a constituent cloud. Crashplan Unlimited destinations. Data de-duplication; block-level incremental.
Eagle Eye Networks was founded in 2012 [1] by Dean Drako, Barracuda Networks' founder and former CEO. [7] Drako said he started the company after frustrations with trying to deploy and use existing video surveillance systems for remote management while he was CEO of Barracuda.
Sourcefire rejected an offer of $187 million in May 2008 from security appliance vendor Barracuda Networks, [7] who had offered to pay US$7.50 per share, amounting to a 13% premium of their then-current stock price. [8] Sourcefire announced its acquisition of the cloud-based antivirus firm Immunet in January 2011. [9] [10]
Archivers, transfer protocols, and version control systems are often used for backups but only software focused on backup is listed here. See Comparison of backup software for features. Free and open-source software
In 2018, Thoma Bravo took cloud-first security provider Barracuda Networks private for $1.6 billion. In April 2022, it sold Barracuda to KKR for about $4 billion. [34] In January 2019, Thoma Bravo acquired Imperva for $2.1 billion. [35] In July 2023, it then sold the company to Thales Group for $3.6 billion. [36]
cloudControl was founded in January 2009 by Philipp Strube, Tobias Wilken and Thomas Ruland in Bonn, Germany. The company moved to the Berlin, Germany area in early 2010 after getting business angel investor funding.