But the marriage was disastrous. NAI tried to force PGP into a closed-source, enterprise-sales model, alienating the open-source community. Developers inside PGP revolted. By 2001, NAI management, under new CEO George Samenuk, decided to exit the cryptography business entirely. In , NAI announced it would discontinue development of PGP. That decision sparked an outcry, leading to a management buyout. In August 2002 , a group of investors including PGP’s original founders bought the assets back, forming PGP Corporation as an independent entity. This decoupling is critical: PGP left the Network Associates orbit just as NAI was rethinking its entire strategy.
PGP (Pretty Good Privacy) was created by Phil Zimmermann in 1991 as a guerilla cryptography tool to fight government restrictions on encryption. By 1996, it was commercialized as PGP, Inc. In , coincidentally the same month as the McAfee/Network General merger, Network Associates (NAI) acquired PGP, Inc. for approximately $35 million. The logic was sound: combine antivirus, network sniffing, and email encryption into a unified security suite. helix software company merge mcafee network general pgp date
To understand the modern cybersecurity landscape, one must look back at the late 1990s and early 2000s—a period of rapid fragmentation followed by aggressive consolidation. This was an era before "endpoint protection platforms" existed. Instead, the market was divided into distinct silos: antivirus (McAfee Associates), network analysis (Network General), desktop policy management (Helix Software Company), and cryptography (PGP Corporation). The story of how these four entities merged is not a simple acquisition by a single buyer, but a complex web of reverse mergers, spin-offs, and private equity engineering that ultimately reshaped enterprise security. But the marriage was disastrous
On , McAfee, Inc. announced it would acquire PGP Corporation for approximately $140 million in cash. Simultaneously, McAfee also acquired Guardian Edge , another encryption firm. The irony was poetic: PGP, which had been ejected from Network Associates (pre-McAfee) in 2002, was now being reabsorbed by McAfee, the direct descendant of that original merger. The deal closed in June 2010 . By 2001, NAI management, under new CEO George
Network Associates (NAI) was now a bloated giant with five divisions: McAfee antivirus, Sniffer network analysis, Magic Solutions (helpdesk), Landesk (from Helix), and an exit from PGP. The company was losing money and focus.
Network General was born from a Stanford University project in 1986, commercializing the first network protocol analyzer. Throughout the 1990s, "Sniffer" was the gold standard for troubleshooting Ethernet and Token Ring networks. But by 1997, Network General faced a problem: the internet was moving from monitoring traffic to securing it. The company realized that controlling endpoints (via Helix’s Landesk) combined with network visibility (Sniffer) could create a powerful "desktop-to-data center" governance suite. Thus, the Helix acquisition was meant to flesh out this vision.