Company type | Public |
---|---|
Industry | Internet, communications |
Founded | April 12, 1995[1] |
Founder | James Bidzos |
Headquarters | Reston, Virginia, U.S. |
Key people | |
Revenue | US$1.49 billion (2023) |
US$1.00 billion (2023) | |
US$818 million (2023) | |
Total assets | US$1.75 billion (2023) |
Total equity | US$−1.6 billion (2023) |
Number of employees | 908 (2023) |
ASNs | |
Website | verisign |
Footnotes / references [2] |
Verisign, Inc. is an American company based in Reston, Virginia, that operates a diverse array of network infrastructure, including two of the Internet's thirteen root nameservers, the authoritative registry for the .com, .net, and .name generic top-level domains and the .cc country-code top-level domains, and the back-end systems for the .jobs and .edu sponsored top-level domains.
In 2010, Verisign sold its authentication business unit – which included Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) certificate, public key infrastructure (PKI), Verisign Trust Seal, and Verisign Identity Protection (VIP) services – to Symantec for $1.28 billion.[3] The deal capped a multi-year effort by Verisign to narrow its focus to its core infrastructure and security business units. Symantec later sold this unit to DigiCert in 2017.[4] On October 25, 2018, NeuStar, Inc. acquired VeriSign's Security Service Customer Contracts.[5] The acquisition effectively transferred Verisign Inc.'s Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) protection, Managed DNS, DNS Firewall and fee-based Recursive DNS services customer contracts.[6]
Verisign's former chief financial officer (CFO) Brian Robins announced in August 2010 that the company would move from its original location of Mountain View, California, to Dulles in Northern Virginia by 2011 due to 95% of the company's business being on the East Coast.[7] The company is incorporated in Delaware.[8]