news4geeks.net
1Sep/110

IBM acquiring i2 for criminal mastermind software

Expanding its portfolio of analytic software for state and local governments, IBM is in the process of acquiring security analytics software provider i2, the companies announced Wednesday. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Law enforcement agencies and corporate security departments use i2's software to pinpoint malfeasant activity within their logs of operational data. The company's Analyst's Notebook digital forensic software can display a visual diagram of people, places, or other entities, showing how different parties are linked.


i2 has more than 4,500 customers across 150 countries. The company said that 12 of the top 20 retail banks use its software. The Boston Police Department and the Criminal Justice System in Orange County, California, share criminal data through i2's Coplink platform. In a $9.6 million contract, the U.S. Army procured an enterprise license to use Analyst's Notebook in its troubled DCGS-A (Distributed Common Ground Systems -- Army) intelligence sharing system. Defense contractor Northrop Grumman folded i2's Coplink into a system it is providing to the Navy to track criminal information from multiple sources.

IBM plans to fuse i2's products with its own data collection, analysis and warehousing software. It will then offer packages based on this combinations to organizations looking to spot suspicious behavior within vast collections of data.

i2, which currently has 350 employees, is based in Cambridge, England, and has U.S. headquarters in McLean, Virginia. IBM will fold i2 into its software group. The deal is expected to close by the end of 2011.

IBM has been focusing more of its efforts on providing state and local government markets with analytics software and services, an effort it touts under the "Smarter Cities" marketing brand. The company is running a pilot project with Portland, Oregon, to build a system to make usage predictions of municipal resources based off of operational data.

I2 is not related to software supply chain management software provider i2 Technologies, which was acquired by JDA Software group in 2010.

(Source: infoworld.com)

 

Microsoft late Friday confirmed that a "zero-day," or unpatched, vulnerability exists in Internet Explorer 8 (IE8), the company's most popular browser. According to multiple security firms, the vulnerability ...
READ MORE
If you run a bank and use an IP video camera from D-Link, you may want to pay attention to this. A number of IP-based surveillance video cameras made by D-Link ...
READ MORE
McAfee said it has found a vulnerability in Adobe Systems' Reader program that reveals when and where a PDF document is opened. The issue is not a serious problem and does ...
READ MORE
Amazon Web Services (AWS) is looking to expand its security offerings with hosted intrusion protection appliances and more extensive encryption features, as it looks to increase the level ...
READ MORE
Getting hacked on Twitter is fast becoming a rite of passage for big corporations, but Tuesday's attack on the Associated Press could be a tipping point and shows ...
READ MORE
Microsoft admits zero-day bug in IE8, pledges patch
D-Link firmware flaws could allow IP video stream
McAfee spots Adobe Reader PDF-tracking flaw
Amazon looks to move security appliances to the
AP Twitter hack prompts fresh look at cyber

Comments (0) Trackbacks (0)

No comments yet.


Leave a comment

No trackbacks yet.