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EMC to acquire RSA Security

EMC to acquire RSA Security

By:  Todd R Weiss  On: 03 Jul 2006 For: Computerworld (US online) Creator

In a deal that marries one of the IT industry's biggest data storage vendors and one of its best-known security companies, EMC Corp. unveiled plans to acquire RSA Security Inc. Under the deal, Hopkinton, Mass.-based EMC will pay US$28 a share, or almost $2.1 billion, for Bedford, Mass.-based RSA, according to the companies.

In a deal that marries one of the IT industry's biggest data storage vendors and one of its best-known security companies, EMC Corp. Thursday unveiled plans to acquire RSA Security Inc.

Under the deal, Hopkinton, Mass.-based EMC will pay US$28 a share, or almost $2.1 billion, for Bedford, Mass.-based RSA, according to the companies. The acquisition is expected to be completed late in the third quarter or early in the fourth quarter of this year.

"The mandate is clear from our customers: We need to be able to ensure that the information is secure and encrypted" with identity management and other protections, said Joe Tucci, EMC's chairman, president and CEO. "These are the things that RSA brings to EMC."

The technology company that integrates security with information management "will be a huge winner in the technology marketplace, and that company is EMC," he said during a conference call late this afternoon.

"EMC is where information lives, and with RSA, it's where it will live securely," Tucci said.

Earlier, in a statement, Tucci said the deal "signals a fundamental change in the landscape of the security market."

"RSA is able to offer EMC customers [assurance] that only authorized users have access to information," said Art Coviello, CEO and president of RSA. "It's time security becomes an integral part of the information [storage] infrastructure."

Upon completion of the acquisition, RSA will operate as EMC's information security division, with headquarters in Bedford. Art Coviello will become an executive vice president of EMC and president of the division.

Phil Shacter, an analyst at Midvale, Utah-based Burton Group, said it's hard to see the immediate driver for EMC's move. But over the longer term, RSA's technologies will allow the storage vendor to offer strong access control and auditing capabilities on top of its storage management products.

"EMC has this major role as custodian of important corporate data," Shacter said. Giving customers a better way to protect that data makes sense for EMC, he said.

RSA itself had been well positioned to grow, especially as a provider of strong authentication technologies, Shacter said. The whole notion of strong identity management and the interest in multifactor authentication -- in particular in the financial and health care communities -- had given RSA a "whole lot of traction" recently, he said. "There was a lot of upside in their end of the business. That helped give them a revenue stream that was healthy and probably improved their evaluation."

Jonathan Penn, an analyst at Cambridge, Mass.-based Forrester Research Inc., said RSA's encryption and key management technologies are likely to be of immediate interest to EMC.

In the short term, EMC's enterprise customers are going to see less of a need for add-on security products to protect stored data, he said. Over the long haul, they can expect to see more identity-driven access control capabilities built into EMC storage management products, he said.


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Todd R Weiss Todd R Weiss is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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