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IronPort Systems has raised $21.0M across 2 funding rounds.
Key people at IronPort Systems.
IronPort Systems was founded in 2000 by Scott Banister (Co-Founder & CTO).
IronPort Systems has raised $21.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
IronPort Systems was a cybersecurity company based in San Bruno, California, that developed email security appliances and services to protect enterprises from Internet threats like spam, viruses, and web-based attacks. The company secured $90 million in funding by 2004 and reported $25 million in quarterly sales as of August 2006, serving 3,000 customers, including eight of the ten largest ISPs. Its solutions were adopted by 20% of the world's biggest enterprises, and it grew to 408 employees. IronPort was acquired by Cisco Systems in 2007 for $830 million, integrating its technology, including the SenderBase reputation service, into Cisco's security portfolio. Co-founded by Scott Banister and CEO Scott Weiss, an early team member at Hotmail, IronPort Systems was established in December 2000.
Key people at IronPort Systems.
IronPort Systems has raised $21.0M across 2 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $17.0M Series B in June 2002.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 1, 2002 | $17M Series B | — | AllegisCyber Capital, First Round Capital, SciFi VC | Announced |
| Nov 1, 2001 | $4M Series A | — | SciFi VC | Announced |
IronPort Systems was founded in 2000 by Scott Banister (Co-Founder & CTO).
IronPort Systems has raised $21.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
IronPort Systems's investors include AllegisCyber Capital, First Round Capital, SciFi VC.
IronPort Systems was a cybersecurity company founded in 2000 that developed email security appliances and services to protect enterprises from Internet threats like spam, viruses, spyware, and web-based attacks.[1][2][3] Its flagship products included the IronPort AntiSpam system, SenderBase (later renamed SensorBase under Cisco) email reputation service, and hardware appliances running a modified FreeBSD kernel called AsyncOS, serving large ISPs and enterprises by blocking junk mail, scanning content, and monitoring traffic.[1][2][4][5] The company achieved rapid growth, reaching $25 million in quarterly sales by August 2006 with 408 employees, before Cisco acquired it for $830 million in 2007, integrating its technology into Cisco's security portfolio.[3][4][5]
IronPort Systems was co-founded in 2000 by Scott Banister and Scott Weiss, both with strong tech pedigrees—Weiss served as an early team member at Hotmail, which became the world's largest web-based email service before its acquisition by Microsoft.[1][5] Headquartered in San Bruno, California, the company emerged during the post-dot-com era when email threats like spam and viruses were exploding, prompting the need for dedicated enterprise defenses.[1][3] Early milestones included raising $90 million in funding by 2004 (with a $45 million Series D led by New Enterprise Associates) and acquiring PostX Corporation in November 2006 for email encryption technology, building pivotal traction among eight of the ten largest ISPs and 20% of the world's biggest enterprises.[5]
IronPort rode the early 2000s wave of surging email and web threats, as Internet messaging became a primary attack vector for spam, spyware, and viruses, filling a gap in enterprise security when incumbents like Cisco had avoided dedicated anti-spam hardware.[2][3][4] Its timing capitalized on post-dot-com recovery and rising demand for perimeter defenses, with market forces like viral outbreaks and junk mail overload favoring appliance-based solutions over pure software.[3][5] By pioneering reputation services and layered appliances, IronPort influenced the ecosystem, paving the way for integrated security in "self-defending networks" and boosting Cisco's push into messaging protection amid competition from startups like Juniper.[2][4]
IronPort's 2007 acquisition marked its endpoint as an independent entity, but its technologies endured within Cisco's Security Technology Group, evolving SenderBase into broader threat intelligence tools still foundational to modern email and web security.[1][2][4] Looking ahead from its legacy, trends like AI-driven threats and zero-trust architectures continue amplifying the need for reputation-based defenses it pioneered, potentially shaping Cisco's ongoing dominance in enterprise security. Its story underscores how timely innovation in threat mitigation can deliver outsized exits, reinforcing the high stakes of cybersecurity timing in tech's enduring battle against Internet perils.