Prolexic Technologies
Prolexic Technologies was a US-based provider of security solutions for protecting websites, data centers, and enterprise IP applications from Distributed Denial of Service attacks at the network, transport, and application layers. It operated a DDoS mitigation platform and a global network of traffic scrubbing centers. Real-time monitoring and mitigation services were provided by a 24/7 security operations control center. Prolexic indicated its DDoS mitigation services make websites, data centers and enterprise IP applications harder to take down via DDoS attacks.
In February 2014, cybersecurity and cloud services company Akamai Technologies acquired Prolexic Technologies.
History
In 2003 Prolexic Technologies was founded by Barrett Lyon and was the subject of the book Fatal System Error by Joseph Menn. Prolexic protects organizations in the following markets: airlines/hospitality, e-commerce, energy, financial services, gambling, gaming, public sector, and software as a service. Sony is said to be a customer of the company. Prolexic claims some of the largest banks as its clients.In 2005, the company was named one of the 100 Hottest Private Companies in North America by Red Herring.
Prolexic was acquired by Internet content delivery network Akamai Technologies in a $370 million deal completed in February 2014. In 2023, Akamai launched the sixth-generation Prolexic DDoS platform, a fully software-defined, scalable infrastructure that doubled its dedicated attack mitigation capacity to 20 Tbps.
Financial history
In 2011, Prolexic completed two financing rounds led by Kennet Partners totaling $15.9 million.In 2012 Baltimore private equity firm Camden Partners invested $6 million in the company, and American Trading and Production Corp invested $2 million as part of an $8 million Series B funding round. In the deal, Jason Tagler of Camden Partners joined the board of directors of Prolexic. Prolexic said it would use the Series B money to support staff and augment its network.
In 2013, Prolexic closed a US$30 million Series C funding round led by new investors Trident Capital and Intel Capital. Kennet Partners, Camden Partners and Medina Capital all took part in the funding round.