Skip to page content

Akamai buys Bay Area security startup for $450 million


Akamai Kendall Square
Internet giant Akamai's headquarters in Kendall Square rises 19 stories.
Gary Higgins

Massachusetts-based Akamai Technologies Inc. inked a $450 million deal to buy a security company that in 2021 had a unicorn valuation of at least $1 billion.

The cybersecurity firm (Nasdaq: AKAM) said Tuesday that its deal to buy privately held Noname Security is slated to close by the end of June.

San Jose, Calif.-based Noname Security billed itself as the first "API security" unicorn after its valuation soared in the wake of a $135 million round three years ago. In 2021, the company had $220 million in total financing.

A spokesperson from Akamai declined to disclose details beyond the purchase price, nor why the price was less than half the company's 2021 valuation. Noname Security's investors Georgian and Lightspeed did not immediately respond to a request for comment on their portfolio company's sale price.

However, many tech startups that saw their valuations soar in 2020 and 2021 have seen a sharp decline in value amid a market downturn in mid-2022. For the past two years, so-called "down rounds" and layoffs have become more common.

Noname Security specializes in API security, or protecting "Application Programming Interface." Such software works a bridge between two sources, allowing them to exchange data. A classic example is a weather app, which retrieves real-time data on temperatures and forecasts from a variety of sources, depending on location, through a set of APIs.

APIs can be leveraged by cyber criminals as access doors to consumers' data, and are frequently at the root of data breaches. One technique cyber attackers use is introducing "shadow APIs" to copy the data that's being exchanged.

Akamai plans to integrate Noname in its Application and API platform, and expects the more than 200 employees at Noname to join its security technology group. The acquisition is expected to deliver approximately $20 million of revenue for fiscal 2024.

Last year, Akamai reported $3.81 billion in total revenue, up 5.4% from the year before, with a profit of $547.6 million. Revenue from Akamai's security segment came at $1.76 billion, or 46% of total sales.

"Akamai has seen a growing need for API protection with our own data showing 109% year over year growth in API attacks," said Mani Sundaram, executive vice president and general manager of Akamai's security technology group. "With the addition of Noname, Akamai believes it will have the breadth of integrations and deployment choices needed to deliver comprehensive API protection for customers across all environments."


Keep Digging

Fundings


SpotlightMore

Raghu Ravinutala, CEO and co-founder, Yellow Messenger
See More
Image via Getty
See More
SPOTLIGHT Awards
See More
Image via Getty Images
See More

Upcoming Events More

Feb
26
TBJ
Mar
08
TBJ
Mar
15
TBJ

Want to stay ahead of who & what is next? Sent twice-a-week, the Beat is your definitive look at the Bay Area’s innovation economy, offering news, analysis & more on the people, companies & ideas driving your city forward. Follow the Beat

Sign Up