CyberTrust
CyberTrust was a security services company formed in Virginia in November 2004 from the merger of TruSecure and Betrusted. Betrusted previously acquired GTE Cybertrust.[1] Cybertrust acquired a large stake in Ubizen, a European security services firm based in Belgium, to become one of the largest information security firms in the world. It was acquired by Verizon Business in 2007.[2] In 2015, the CyberTrust root certificates were acquired by DigiCert, Inc., a leading global Certificate Authority (CA) and provider of trusted identity and authentication services.
History
CyberTrust was founded as a subsidiary of GTE Corporation's Government Systems Information Security Directorate. It focused on security services for electronic commerce. These included authentication, privacy, integrity and non-repudiation using Public Key Encryption technology. In 2000, GTE sold CyberTrust to Ireland-based security company Baltimore Technologies for $150 million.[3] In 2003, Baltimore Technologies divested its operating companies, including all digital certificate operations to BeTrusted Holdings, Inc.[4] A year later in September 2004, BeTrusted announced its intention to merge with former competitor TruSecure Corporation and in November the resulting company was incorporated in Virginia as CyberTrust.[5] Verizon Business then acquired Cybertrust in 2007,[6] reuniting it with its former parent (Verizon was created by the merger of GTE and Bell Atlantic). Financial terms were not disclosed. In 2015, the CyberTrust root certificates were acquired by DigiCert, Inc., a leading global Certificate Authority (CA) and provider of trusted identity and authentication services. The financial terms were not disclosed.[7]
Cybertrust used its majority shareholding to dilute the remaining Ubizen shares, forcing it to acquire the remaining shares and delist Ubizen in 2005.
Betrusted was originally created by PWC and sold to One Equity Partners, a division of Bank 1. One Equity Partners also purchased 90 East and SecureNet (who bought the PKI component of Baltimore and the gateway operations of iSecure).[8]
Present
The acquisition of the CyberTrust root certificates makes DigiCert the second-largest Certificate Authority (CA) for high-assurance SSL Certificates. As part of the deal, DigiCert will assume management of the CyberTrust/Verizon trusted roots and intermediate certificates. Verizon will continue to offer SSL Certificates as a reseller of DigiCert.[9]
Pursuant to DigiCert's acquiring Verizon Enterprise SSL business, DigiCert announces its partnership with Cybertrust Japan to expand its market presence in Asia.[10] Under this new partnership, DigiCert and Cybertrust Japan also announce Cyber Secure Asia, a wholly owned subsidiary of Cybertrust Japan, which will market DigiCert's certificate technology to Southeast Asia from a regional headquarters in Singapore.
References
- "Agreement between the Company and beTRUSTed (Omniroot)". www.sec.gov. Retrieved 2023-01-11.
- Duffy, Jim (2007-05-14). "Verizon Business acquires Cybertrust". Network World. Retrieved 2023-01-11.
- "Baltimore Technologies Buys CyberTrust for $150 Million - InternetNews". www.internetnews.com. Retrieved 2015-12-07.
- "Agreement between the Company and beTRUSTed (Omniroot)". www.sec.gov. Retrieved 2022-05-13.
- Kawamoto, Dawn. "TruSecure, Betrusted to merge and rename". CNET. Retrieved 2022-05-13.
- "Verizon Business to Acquire Information Security Services Leader Cybertrust: Combination Creates Global Security Powerhouse". Verizon Business (press release). 2007-05-14.
- "DigiCert Grows SSL/TLS Business Via Verizon Enterprise SSL Deal". www.eweek.com. Retrieved 2015-10-12.
- Roberts, Paul F. (2004-09-20). "TruSecure merges with Betrusted". Network World. Retrieved 2020-06-02.
- "DigiCert Acquires Verizon Enterprise SSL Business". www.digicert.com. Retrieved 2015-12-07.
- "DigiCert Partners with Cybertrust Japan". www.digicert.com. Retrieved 2015-12-07.
External links
- Verizon Enterprise
- DigiCert, Inc.
- Cybertrust Japan
- Cyber Secure Asia Archived 2015-12-22 at the Wayback Machine