Category: Security

Data Security leader also posts biggest-ever Q4   London.—28 January, 2010—Imperva, the market leader in data security, announced today that it achieved 30 percent growth in 2009 over 2008, finishing a strong fiscal year 2009 with the largest quarter in company history. Imperva increased its bookings in Q4 2009 nearly 30 percent over Q4 2008. The company's success is driven by significant success in global growth, increasing the customer count to more than 1000 enterprises.   “Imperva’s performance in 2009 highlights the high priority placed on data security during difficult economic times,” said VP of EMEA, Henk Jan Spanjaard. “Data breaches continue and organizations are looking for something fast and effective, which is what Imperva’s Securesphere provides.  At a time when many companies—even security vendors—are struggling, I am glad that Imperva continues to thrive. The simplicity, comprehensive and effectiveness of our products make Imperva the market’s most attractive data security solution.”

                                                                                                                                                                    The key highlights from 2009 include: ·         Imperva closed 2009 with more than a 30% growth rate over 2008.  ·         Significant overseas growth: o   EMEA 59% o   APAC 28% ·         The appointments of Stree Naidu as VP of Asia Pacific-Japan, Henk Jan Spanjaard as VP of EMEA and Yaniv Shaya as VP of engineering. ·         New product capabilities: o   The release of SecureSphere 7.0 and the introduction of the SecureSphere Discovery and Assessment Server, which introduced integrated data risk management to Imperva’s leading Data Security product portfolio. o   Improved insider threat protection that helped security professionals track, identify and block potentially malicious insider data theft. o   Integration with WhiteHat Sentinel and other leading dynamic testing vendors so enterprises can immediately remediate discovered website vulnerabilities via a "virtual patch" without the need for development intervention.

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