[ISN] Venturing into security

From: InfoSec News (isnat_private)
Date: Wed Apr 10 2002 - 01:46:12 PDT

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    http://news.com.com/2100-1001-879418.html
    
    By Robert Lemos 
    Staff Writer, CNET News.com
    April 9, 2002, 4:20 PM PT
    
    MENLO PARK, Calif.-- Recent cuts in earnings estimates may have
    tarnished the computer-security market's image as the golden goose of
    the tight tech market, but venture capitalists are still on an egg
    hunt.
    
    On Tuesday, several dozen representatives from some of the largest
    venture funds assembled here to listen as network-protection firms,
    software companies, and financial houses discussed the state of
    computer security.
    
    The verdict: The computer-security market is not immune to the tech
    malaise, but it still appears to have strength, said Israel Hernandez,
    vice president of equity research for investment firm Lehman Brothers.
    
    "We are not yet in a recovery, but the seeds are germinating,"  
    Hernandez added.
    
    Last week, two of the computer-security sector's bellwethers, Check
    Point Software and RSA Data Security, warned that they would miss
    their revenue estimates by 15 percent and 12 percent, respectively.
    
    The pronouncements were the most significant of several hard knocks in
    the security sector, including cuts in revenue expectations from
    SonicWall and widespread speculation that Cisco Systems may also miss
    its mark.
    
    Hernandez said he cut his own growth estimates for the 30 top
    companies in the sector to 10 percent from 15 percent based on the
    most recent revenue cuts.
    
    Yet, these are just bumps on the road to recovery, not crashes, said
    James Anderson, vice president of information security for Inovant, a
    subsidiary of Visa International that is responsible for the financial
    firm's internal security.
    
    "This is what a recovery feels like in the security world," Anderson
    said. "If there are those who are waiting for something cushier and
    plusher, I would say, don't hold your breath."
    
    However, Anderson does hold out hope; while Visa International's
    information-technology spending has not increased, the share earmarked
    for security has risen.
    
    And the warnings haven't dampened the enthusiasm of venture
    capitalists for start-ups aiming to better protect companies'
    information and networks.
    
    Venture firms ranging in size from the large Benchmark Capital to
    small consultant teams attended Tuesday morning's presentations put on
    by Garage Technology Ventures in a conference center near Stanford
    University. Representatives of well-known firms, such as Symantec and
    Computer Associates, also attended the conference, on the lookout for
    any potential contenders to add to their stable of security
    technologies.
    
    While security companies may have to tough it out, they are seeing
    more potential customers aware of the need for security.
    
    "Everyone is using it," Asheem Chandna, vice president of business
    development and product management for Check Point, said of security.  
    Check Point has nearly 100,000 of its firewalls and virtual private
    networks installed in companies worldwide.
    
    Microsoft's chief security strategist, Scott Charney, agreed that
    companies and the government have a new sense of urgency about
    protecting their data.
    
    "The demand for security has never been higher," Charney said. "And
    the consciousness about what happens if we don't do it right has never
    been higher."
    
    Charney, a former Department of Justice cybercrime prosecutor, started
    at Microsoft at the beginning of April. He spoke on a panel discussing
    current trends in security.
    
    That doesn't mean it's easy selling out there, said Wyatt Starnes,
    founder and CEO of data-security software provider Tripwire. Companies
    are also getting smarter about the technologies.
    
    "Fear, uncertainty and doubt no longer fly," Starnes said. "You can't
    frighten a company into buying from you by saying they will be hacked.  
    (People are asking) how does this make me money or how does it save me
    money?"
    
    
    
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