Oracle announced
today the acquisition of Oblix, a developer of identity-based
security products. Oblix is a leading developer of identity
management software that allows Web access control, including SSO
(Single Sign On), identity administration, and user provisioning.
Oblix also provides security and regulatory compliance solutions,
Oracle said in a news release.
Oblix'stechnology complements
the identity and access management solutions currently available in Oracle
Identity Management and included as part of Oracle Application Server 10g.
But the acquisition of Oblix
gives Oracle a stronger identity management position as part of Oracle's
application platform suite. Oracle said it will move quickly to integrate
Oblix's security products with its own infrastructure software.
Nine-year-old Oblix's product
portfolio includes CoreID for identity management, identity federation server
software ShareID, and CoreSV for managing Web services. Oracle said it will
continue to sell Oblix's products as stand-alone software, while it also
integrates Oblix's features into its own technology stack.
"This acquisition will allow
Oracle to offer customers a complete solution for securely managing identities;
one that is even more flexible, scalable, and integrated and helps customers
lower the cost of regulatory compliance," said Thomas Kurian, senior vice
president, Oracle Server Technologies, in a statement. "These capabilities will
further enhance Oracle's market-leading security infrastructure. We are very
pleased to be joining with Oblix to provide a new level of security and service
to our customers."
"The strength of Oblix's leading
identity management solutions combined with Oracle's worldwide presence and its
extensive software and services business will bring to customers an
unprecedented ability to build identity into their software infrastructure and
applications," said Gordon Eubanks, president and CEO of Oblix. "This
combination represents the future direction of security software."
Oblix, based in Cupertino,
Calif., has about 100 employees, and almost all will be offered jobs at Oracle,
according to an Oracle spokesman. Oblix's staff will be gradually moved to
Oracle's Redwood Shores, California, headquarters, he said.
Oracle plans to hold a
conference call Tuesday to further discuss the acquisition, with its senior vice
president of its Server Technologies group, Thomas Kurian. After years of
spurning acquisitions as a viable growth option, Oracle has been on a shopping
spree lately. In December it spent $10.3 billion to buy rival applications
developer PeopleSoft, and last week it signed a deal to buy retail applications
maker Retek for $630 million. Oracle Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Larry
Ellison said last Tuesday that Oracle had no plans for any major acquisitions
this quarter.
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