Skip navigation
Google Cloud logo Getty Images

Google Cloud Buys the ‘Navy Seals of Cybersecurity’

Acquisition of Mandiant boosts competitiveness vs. Azure, AWS.

Google is buying cybersecurity firm Mandiant, a move that strengthens its standing in the race for cloud computing dominance. It is Google's largest acquisition since buying Motorola in 2011.

Google is paying $23 per share in cash for the company, which values the deal at $5.4 billion including Mandiant’s net cash reserves. Mandiant will be folded into Google Cloud.

As more companies move away from on-prem data centers into the cloud, cybersecurity safeguards in the cloud become paramount.

“Organizations around the world are facing unprecedented cybersecurity challenges as the sophistication and severity of attacks that were previously used to target major governments are now being used to target companies in every industry,” said Google Cloud CEO Thomas Kurian in a statement.

Google Cloud has been a distant third in cloud computing. According to Statista, AWS is the leader with a 33% market share and Microsoft’s Azure is second with 21%. Google is third with 10%. The other players include Alibaba Cloud (6%), IBM Cloud (4%), Salesforce (3%), Tencent Cloud (3%), Oracle Cloud (2%) and others.

"This type of offering is what Google needs more of, but they must be integrated services and not just a collection of different advisory services," said Roy Illsley, chief analyst of enterprise IT at sister research firm Omdia. 

'Navy Seals of cybersecurity'

At least, it is adding a strong partner. Mandiant is seen in the industry as the “Navy Seals of cybersecurity,” Wedbush analyst Daniel Ives said in a research note provided to AI Business.

"Mandiant will bring more real-time threat intelligence to Google's cyber security arsenal and enable Google Cloud to better respond to and prevent a wide array of cyber security threats," he said.

Moreover, "Google is doubling down on its cybersecurity footprint at the right time with Mandiant and looking to differentiate itself from the likes of behemoths Microsoft and Amazon in the cloud arms race."

 Google

Source: Google

This deal also sets Google apart from AWS and Azure, which thus far have chosen to develop cybersecurity products internally, Ives added. As such, it will put pressure on competitors to acquire cybersecurity firms to keep up with Google.

The deal is a "shot across the bow from Google to Microsoft and Amazon" and represents "the tip of the iceberg to a massive phase of consolidation potentially ahead for the cloud space."

Possible M&A cybersecurity candidates including Varonis, Tenable, CyberArk, Qualys, Rapid7, SailPoint, and Ping standout given their "laser focus on protecting next generation cloud workloads from cyber attacks," Ives said.

The deal could equip Google Cloud with the tech it was missing, suggested Omdia analyst Bradley Shimmin. "To my eyes, Google is lagging on the high-touch side," he told AI Business. "When you look at GCP itself, they are on par with the other hyperscalers in terms of offering native security practices like multi-tier data encryption and external key management. But they leave way too much to SI and technology partners to handle difficult security challenges. This acquisition seems able to help them do that in a more end-to-end manner."

Google said Mandiant will add to its existing strengths in cloud and on-prem security, which include BeyondCorp Enterprise for Zero Trust, VirusTotal to address malicious content and software vulnerabilities, Chronicle for security analytics and automation, among other systems.

Mandiant brings real-time and in-depth threat intelligence “gained on the frontlines of cybersecurity with the largest organizations in the world,” Google said. They claim that together, they can offer companies protection “at every stage of the security lifecycle.”

This article was originally published on AI Business, a Data Center Knowledge sister publication.

Hide comments

Comments

  • Allowed HTML tags: <em> <strong> <blockquote> <br> <p>

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
Publish