back to article HP buys security tools firm ArcSight for $1.5bn

HP has agreed to buy security event management firm ArcSight for $1.5bn. The deal, rumoured over the weekend and announced on Monday, is the IT giant's second significant acquisition in two weeks, following the purchase of storage outfit 3PAR. It also follows last month's deal to buy application security tools firm Fortify …

COMMENTS

This topic is closed for new posts.
  1. JeffyPooh
    FAIL

    HP - maker of printer ink and 17GB printer drivers

    Gawd help us all if HP ever sticks their toe into the consumer PC 'SEKURITEE!!" market. The entire Internet will grind to a halt when the very first user gently clicks Update.

    1. Mark Aggleton
      FAIL

      Yet another person...

      .... who's idea of HP is about 15 years out of date.

  2. InITForTheMoney

    This makes sense for HP, so who will buy netForensics?

    HP is huge in government following it's acquisition of EDS, ArcSight are pretty much the go-to shop for Audit and Security Event Management in Government, there are very few products on the market which even come close to touching it. It makes sense for HP to buy products it can easily sell through it's services arm, as products like this tend to involve a lot of services to set them up and get them to work with the vast array of devices that are involved in government networks.

    The second best product in this market is netForensics, if I were a betting man I'd put money on Oracle snapping them up shortly.

    Why Oracle? IBM has Tivoli suite, which has an auditing component and an event management component, IBM could build SIEM functionality fairly easily from it's existing products (if it hasn't already, I'm a bit out of touch with Tivoli) and it wouldn't need any additional talent to accomplish this. Cisco has MARS, it's not fantastic, but it's a mature product. Dell doesn't have enough software assets or interest in this market to be shopping. CA has Log management products but doesn't appear to have the vision.

    So Oracle are the most likely buyer that I can see for nFX as they aren't likely to be bidding against much competition and they don't have a product in their arsenal that fits this space. I would expect nFX to go fairly cheap and Oracle to put in quite a big investment to make it a good contender to ArcSight, the key problem both products have at the moment is scalability, but ArcSight is currently a bit ahead in that area. As both products run atop of an instance of Oracle DB, you'd think it would be something that Oracle could easily sort out with nFX... no?

  3. Anonymous Coward
    Unhappy

    What happend to ...

    ...the catchy catch-phrase HP used to have - "Invent". They seemed to have dropped that for "Acquire".

  4. JeffyPooh
    FAIL

    Not quite 17 GB

    One typical example of an HP printer driver is "375.39MB" (I'm cut-and-paste quoting).

    Crazy.

    And of course it needs to be updated (re-downloaded in it's entirety) every few months/weeks/days.

    "First-against-the-wall...", etc.

This topic is closed for new posts.

Other stories you might like