Intel buys Sydney startup for $21.5m

By

Matt Barrie's Sensory Networks.

Intel has bought Australian security startup Sensory Networks for $21.5 million.

Intel buys Sydney startup for $21.5m

Sensory Networks sold its 200Gbps pattern matching technology to network equipment vendors and counted LG and Intel's McAfee as customers.

The company was founded in 2003 by Matt Barrie and engineers Geoff Langdale, Darren Williams, Nicholas de Jong, and ANU machine learning professor Stephen Gould.

It turned its focus from hardware to software in 2009 and offers regex pattern matching solutions HyperScan and Chimera that work with intrusion detection, anti-malware and deep packet inspection systems.

Barrie founded Freelancer.com with three of the Sensory Networks founders. He left Sensory Networks as a director but remains a shareholder.

"It is a great outcome for the team," Barrie told iTnews sister site SC. "With Intel behind us, it will help us get into the tier one space ... it is something you need when you try to sell to Cisco."

He said the "bleeding edge" technology competed with the likes of New Zealand's Endace.

The company headquarters will be located at its research and development facility in Sydney.

Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.

Copyright © SC Magazine, Australia

Tags:

Most Read Articles

CBA using facial recognition logins to verify disputed payments

CBA using facial recognition logins to verify disputed payments

Top US diplomat impersonated with AI by unknown actor

Top US diplomat impersonated with AI by unknown actor

UK police arrest four over cyberattacks on M&S, Co-op and Harrods

UK police arrest four over cyberattacks on M&S, Co-op and Harrods

Google Gemini for Workspace vulnerable to prompt injection attacks

Google Gemini for Workspace vulnerable to prompt injection attacks

Log In

  |  Forgot your password?