Register.com: Difference between revisions
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On August 9, 2005, Register.com announced that they signed a merger agreement for an acquisition by Vector Capital Corporation, a San Francisco-based private equity firm. <ref>[http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/news/1022837/registercom-bought-out-by-vector-capital The Inquirer]</ref>Public share holders of Register.com receive cashed consideration of $7.81 per share in the merger. Following the merger, Register.com was once again privately held and was no longer listed on The Nasdaq National Market.<ref>[http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-138062292.html highbeam Research]</ref> | On August 9, 2005, Register.com announced that they signed a merger agreement for an acquisition by Vector Capital Corporation, a San Francisco-based private equity firm. <ref>[http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/news/1022837/registercom-bought-out-by-vector-capital The Inquirer]</ref>Public share holders of Register.com receive cashed consideration of $7.81 per share in the merger. Following the merger, Register.com was once again privately held and was no longer listed on The Nasdaq National Market.<ref>[http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-138062292.html highbeam Research]</ref> | ||
==DDoS Attacks== | |||
On January 6, 2001, Register.com had a severe Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack that lasted for an entire week. It was the first major attack using DNS servers as reflectors.<ref>[http://www.secure64.com/news-register-reflective-ddos-dns Secure 64]</ref> | On January 6, 2001, Register.com had a severe Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack that lasted for an entire week. It was the first major attack using DNS servers as reflectors.<ref>[http://www.secure64.com/news-register-reflective-ddos-dns Secure 64]</ref> | ||
On April 1, 2009, Register.com suffered another major DDoS attack, disruptingthousands of web sites. <ref>[http://voices.washingtonpost.com/securityfix/2009/04/web_sites_disrupted_by_attack.html The Washington Post]</ref>FBI and The Department of Homeland Security were engaged to help register.com to solve the issue.<ref>[http://www.informationweek.com/blog/main/archives/2009/04/regitsercom_suf.html;jsessionid=HIULXEGJM5SXDQE1GHPSKH4ATMY32JVN Information week's Security Web Blog]</ref> Services experienced different kind of problems for almost three days and the system was restored through counter-measures and minimized the disruption.<ref>[http://www.network-box.com/aboutus/news/registercom-affected-massive-ddos Network Box]</ref> Their CEO, Larry Kutscher, explains "For the past three days Register.com has been experiencing intermittent service disruptions as a result of a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack – an intentionally malicious flooding of our systems from various points across the internet. We know the disruption of business this has caused our customers is unacceptable, and we are working round the clock to combat it." | On April 1, 2009, Register.com suffered another major DDoS attack, disruptingthousands of web sites. <ref>[http://voices.washingtonpost.com/securityfix/2009/04/web_sites_disrupted_by_attack.html The Washington Post]</ref>FBI and The Department of Homeland Security were engaged to help register.com to solve the issue.<ref>[http://www.informationweek.com/blog/main/archives/2009/04/regitsercom_suf.html;jsessionid=HIULXEGJM5SXDQE1GHPSKH4ATMY32JVN Information week's Security Web Blog]</ref> Services experienced different kind of problems for almost three days and the system was restored through counter-measures and minimized the disruption.<ref>[http://www.network-box.com/aboutus/news/registercom-affected-massive-ddos Network Box]</ref> Their CEO, Larry Kutscher, explains "For the past three days Register.com has been experiencing intermittent service disruptions as a result of a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack – an intentionally malicious flooding of our systems from various points across the internet. We know the disruption of business this has caused our customers is unacceptable, and we are working round the clock to combat it." | ||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 14:15, 1 November 2010
Type: | Private |
Industry: | Registrar |
Founded: | USA (1999) |
Founder(s): | Richard Foreman Peter Foreman |
Headquarters: | 575 8th Ave., 11th FL New York, NY 10018-3011, USA |
Employees: | 489 (2008) |
Revenue: | 51.70 M (2008) |
Website: | http://www.register.com |
Key People | |
David L. Brown, President Gary S. Michel , EVP and CFO Myles Trachtenberg, SVP and CIO |
Register.com is a web hosting and internet domain register company based on NY, USA.
The company mainly sells registrations for general extension i.e. .com, .net, .org , .co , .biz and also country based extensions i.e. .uk, .us, .jp, .ca etc.The company serves an extensive range of customers from individuals and small businesses to large corporations, and it has more than 2.5 million domain names under its management. [1]
The company also offers Email Package, website hosting, website developing, security solutions, internet marketing etc services. The headquarter of Register.com is in New York city and it has has branches in Baltimore and Halifix, USA, in London, England and in Nova Scotia, Canada.
History
The company was founded in 1994 by brothers Richard Foreman and Peter Foreman as an Internet Service Provider under the name Forman Interactive. The company changed its name to Register.com in 1999.
Register.com was one of the first five testbed Registrars for the competitive Shared Registry System announced my ICANN in 1999.[2]
In 2000, Register.com issued an IPO and began trading on the NASDAQ under ticker symbol RCOM pricing its share at $24.[3] In 2004 the company was listed by VeriSign as one of the top domain name registrars in the world.
Register.com parted ways with co-founder and CEO Richard Forman in June, 2003.[4] Peter Forman, brother of Richard Forman and co-foundeder of the company assumed the president and CEO position the very same day. Peter Foreman resiged as CEO in February 2005.
In 2006 Register.com was sold to the San Francisco-based private equity firm Vector Capital Corporation for about 200 million dollars.[5] David Moore was appointed as inturim CEO of the company by Vector Capital after the acquisition. [6]. During his time, the company focused on cost reduction through better business practices and was successful in the process.
on November 1, 2006, register.com announced appointment of Larry Kutscher, as Chief Executive Officer of the company.[7]. Under Kutscher, Register.com continued the strategy of supporting small business owners and entrepreneurs.[8]
Kutscher served as CEO of Register.com until July 2010[9]. In July 2010, Register.com was acquired by Web.com for about $135 million.[10]
ICANN Registrar Accreditation
In march 1999, ICANN Board posted the Statement of Registrar Accreditation Policy to implement a program for registrar accreditation for the .com, .net, and .org top-level domains. From March 11 to April 8, 1999, ICANN accepted applications from entities seeking accreditation to participate as one of the five domain name registrars in the SRS Testbed Program.[11]
On April 21, 1999, ICANN announced Register.com was one of the first five testbed registrars for the competitive Shared Registry System. On June 7, the company began operations under this name as a paid registrar in the .com, .net and .org domains along with AOL, CORE, France Telecom/Oléane and Melbourne IT. Register.com is the first registrar to come online on 7 June. [12]
Vector's acquisition of Register.com
Register.com launched very successful IPO in 2000 and one of the pionneer company in internet business for 4-5 years. However, during 2005 as demand for domain names slowed, Register.com’s revenues and market value fell significantly and the company began to face different challenges. [13]The company developed a strategy to focus on small business and providing online services to serve that segment of the market but still kept underperforming in terms of revenues and on the stock market.[14]
On August 9, 2005, Register.com announced that they signed a merger agreement for an acquisition by Vector Capital Corporation, a San Francisco-based private equity firm. [15]Public share holders of Register.com receive cashed consideration of $7.81 per share in the merger. Following the merger, Register.com was once again privately held and was no longer listed on The Nasdaq National Market.[16]
DDoS Attacks
On January 6, 2001, Register.com had a severe Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack that lasted for an entire week. It was the first major attack using DNS servers as reflectors.[17]
On April 1, 2009, Register.com suffered another major DDoS attack, disruptingthousands of web sites. [18]FBI and The Department of Homeland Security were engaged to help register.com to solve the issue.[19] Services experienced different kind of problems for almost three days and the system was restored through counter-measures and minimized the disruption.[20] Their CEO, Larry Kutscher, explains "For the past three days Register.com has been experiencing intermittent service disruptions as a result of a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack – an intentionally malicious flooding of our systems from various points across the internet. We know the disruption of business this has caused our customers is unacceptable, and we are working round the clock to combat it."
References
- ↑ Yahoo! Finance
- ↑ Robert H'obbes' Internet Timeline
- ↑ cnet News
- ↑ Internetnews.com
- ↑ Red Herring
- ↑ Sonostar Ventures
- ↑ Crain's New York Business.com
- ↑ The Washington Post
- ↑ Earth Times
- ↑ Daily Finance
- ↑ ICANN.org
- ↑ Robert H'obbes' Internet Timeline
- ↑ Vector Capital Case Studies
- ↑ Red Herring
- ↑ The Inquirer
- ↑ highbeam Research
- ↑ Secure 64
- ↑ The Washington Post
- ↑ Information week's Security Web Blog
- ↑ Network Box