From: Super-User <root@nwdtc.com>
To: cypherpunks@algebra.com
Message Hash: 9e81695ca96c2503517b07da2a5ebe844a63bbfc08ccdaa333ad228ce04aac44
Message ID: <3368FF82.4EDB@teleport.com>
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UTC Datetime: 1997-05-01 20:50:36 UTC
Raw Date: Fri, 2 May 1997 04:50:36 +0800
From: Super-User <root@nwdtc.com>
Date: Fri, 2 May 1997 04:50:36 +0800
To: cypherpunks@algebra.com
Subject: Layoffs at PGP
Message-ID: <3368FF82.4EDB@teleport.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
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http://www.wired.com/news/business/story/3543.html
I what part of the employee base was purged? Anyone we know?
Sounds like PGP sold their soul to the company store... (or the
corporate binge and purge mentality.)
[arrow] PGP Pretty Good on Privacy of Layoff Details
by Kristi Coale
6:09pm 30.Apr.97.PDT In keeping with its core technology -
information security - Pretty Good Privacy was tight-lipped about
the details of the layoffs it announced to employees Tuesday
morning.
"We prefer not to mention the number as we are a privacy company,
but it was small in number and limited in scope," spokesman Mike
Nelson told Wired News on Wednesday.
The layoffs are part of what Nelson described as a shift in the
company's strategy from developing products for protecting
individual privacy to being a security specialist for the Fortune
500. Analysts say this rejiggering of priorities is not a drastic
one, pointing to the 24 March purchase of ZoomIt, a company that
specialized in corporate, enterprise-wide security systems.
The shift represents a maturation of a company that built its
reputation through a type of grass-roots organizing: distributing
its products through freeware, said Ezra Gottheil, director of
Internet business strategies in Newton, Massachusetts.
"They're a real Internet company. They're also an ambitious
company that sees it's time to move into corporate IS
departments," Gottheil said.
Part of that shift may mean that Internet Fast-Forward, an
ad-filtering technology developed by PrivNet, which PGP acquired
last November, will take a back seat - perhaps permanently.
Although PGP wouldn't say that it is pulling the plug on the
product, Fast-Forward is considered a "lower priority" than other
developments, Nelson said.
"Internet Fast-Forward is not as closely related to the tools we
develop for individuals for privacy," he said. And the fact that
Fast-Forward filters ads which are an "inimical part of some of
the emerging Web commerce models ... we don't want to hinder this
development."
Nelson wouldn't say whether the layoffs affected anyone in
PrivNet but noted that the acquisition generated engineering
talent PGP wanted. That technical know-how along with other
resources are being focused on centralized corporate security
systems. In fact, the company has put out a casting call for more
engineers to satisfy its resource dearth in research and
development in this area.
Ultimately, all of these adjustments could simply be PGP's
preparation to woo the investors it seeks for a public offering.
Although PGP has no immediate plans to go public, company
officials intend to review these investment schedules this
summer, Nelson said.
Related Wired Links:
PGP's Export Solution: Stamps, Envelopes
by James Glave
PGP Zooms into Corporate Security
by Spencer E. Ante
PGP Lets You Take Charge of Your Cookies
by James Glave
Beat That Tap - It's PGP For Sale
by David Lazarus
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