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Feds Kill Check Point's Sourcefire Bid

Caffeinated Geek writes to tell us The Register is reporting that Check Point Software has removed their bid to buyout rival software company Sourcefire following objections from the FBI and the Pentagon to the Treasury's Committee on Foreign Investments. From the article: "Federal agency objections to the security software tie-up center on the implementation of Sourcefire's anti-intrusion software 'Snort' by the Bureau and Department of Defense, AP reports. In private meetings between the panel and Check Point, FBI and Pentagon officials took exception to letting foreigners acquire the sensitive technology."

5 of 181 comments (clear)

  1. But it is freely available to anybody by andy314159pi · · Score: 4, Informative
    But snort is freely available to anybody right now:

    http://www.snort.org/

  2. Not about the technology per se by einhverfr · · Score: 4, Informative

    It is about support contracts and how much information about DoD infrastructure they want a foreign firm to have. This is far more of a serious and legitimate issue than the sale of the operation of a few cargo cranes to a Dubai firm.

    The issue is that the DoD is very serious about controlling the amount of access foreigners have to their infrastructure and information on that infrastructure. I have it on very good authority that some DoD divisions are moving away (at a cautious rate) from Microsoft technologies precisely due to their difficulty in avoiding having their tech support calls routed outside the US. However, this is probably all I can say on this board.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  3. Re:closed source by chill · · Score: 4, Informative

    Check Point firewalls are prohibited in a lot of government departments, including the Pentagon and most of the DoD. There are exceptions, of course.

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
  4. A different view on things by brennz · · Score: 4, Informative

    I have read more BS in these threads than anywhere else in recent memory.

    So, I'll in you on the truth.

    Foreign nations are actively seeking to get their hands into US classified govt sites, to get the underlying information which they want DESPERATELY. Israel, France, China, Russia - they are the most aggressive.

    A few years back I was working for DOD. Someone was trying to make a sales pitch for equipment they wanted to sell us, for use in classified environments. They claimed to be a US company.

    My boss asked me to look into the company and get back to him. It took a few hours, but I found exactly what I think he already suspected.

    The company was a US company in name only. The entire company was infested at the upper levels by former intelligence personnel from one of the above countries already mentioned. Most of their company also, was in this foreign country too. Only a small amount of sales ppl actually were in the US for the company.

    They made a huge amount of factual misrepresentations, trying to trick us.

    When the US govt says no, there is normally a reason behind it, or active intelligence efforts supporting their rationale. Don't believe some moronic reporter with shit for brains that is labelling something as "protectionism".

    1. Re:A different view on things by RyanCowardin · · Score: 5, Informative

      And just to rehash history... it's not like Israel has EVER tried to spy on the US before or anything.

      When the government does business with a US company, it's a heck of a lot easier for the administration to send someone over to said company threatening, "Hey, we don't like what you're doing! Keep it up and we'll happily send your entire company on a quail hunting trip with Dick Cheney!" It just doesn't have the same affect on a foreign owned company, unfortunatly.