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Tempered Networks, Inc.
Company type Private
IndustryTechnology
FounderJeff Hussey
HeadquartersWashington, ,
USA
Key people
Products
  • IDN Conductor
  • HIPservice Software
  • HIPservice Hardware
  • HIPrelay
Number of employees
70+
Websitehttp://temperednetworks.com

Tempered Networks is a U.S. based company headquartered in Seattle, Washington. Jeffrey S. Hussey was named President and CEO when the company was founded in October 2014.[1][2] Hussey was the founder of F5 Networks (NASDAQ: FFIV), which was added to the S&P 500 in 2010. To date, Tempered Networks has raised $39M [3][4][5] of angel and institutional venture financing, with primary participation by Ignition Partners, Rally Capital, and IDG Ventures (IDG Ventures is now RIDGE Ventures). The company’s board of directors includes Jeffrey S. Hussey, Stuart Bailey (founder of Infoblox), Erik Swan (co-founder of Splunk), John Connors (Managing Partner at Ignition), and Dennis Weibling (Managing Director of Rally Capital).

History

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Tempered Networks’ technology is based on eight years of research and development at The Boeing Company when the airplane manufacturer needed to transform its 777 aircraft manufacturing systems from fixed monolithic tooling to lean mobile robotics. The new mobile manufacturing systems required secure connectivity and segmentation over wireless communications. Security was paramount since the company’s intellectual property is a high value target for hackers. The company solved its connectivity challenges by developing a secure networking solution that leveraged the Host Identity Protocol.[6]

Technology

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The HIP-based technology was successfully deployed in Boeing’s manufacturing facility, but maintaining and enhancing networking technology was not the company’s core competency. As such, in 2012 Boeing allowed the developers to commercialize the solution by spinning up a new company.

Tempered Networks is the first company to deliver a commercially available networking platform based on HIP. Its solution, Identity Defined Networking (IDN), provides a unified, common architecture for secure networking across the enterprise. The IDN design goal is making it simple to connect and segment networks by creating encrypted zero trust overlays with little to no modification to the underlay network or security infrastructure. [7][8]

Tempered Networks sells its product and services worldwide, with customers in a broad array of industries including healthcare, manufacturing, energy, financial services, government agencies, hospitality and gaming, and higher education. [9][10][11]

References

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  1. ^ Bernier, Paula (November 2014). “Creating a 'Well Tempered' Network: M2M Security Firm Gets New Funds, Leader, Name”. IOT Evolution. Retrieved September 10, 2018.
  2. ^ Dudley, Brier (November 2014). “Asguard relaunching as Tempered Networks, helmed by F5 founder”. Seattle Times. Retrieved September 11, 2018.
  3. ^ Dudley, Brier (March 2015). “Tempered Networks secures $15 million”. Seattle Times. Retrieved September 7, 2018.
  4. ^ Soper, Taylor (August 2016). “Tempered Networks raises $10M for networking and security tech that helps companies prevent cyberattacks”. GeekWire. Retrieved September 10,2018.
  5. ^ Soper, Taylor (December 2017). “Tempered Networks raises another $7M for ‘identity-defined networking’ cybersecurity software”. GeekWire. Retrieved September 10, 2018.
  6. ^ Kerravala, Zeus (June 2017) “Tempered Networks makes it HIP to connect the unconnectable”. Network World. Retrieved September 10, 2018.
  7. ^ Kerner, Sean Michael (November 2014). “Tempered Networks Aims to Solve IoT Security With HIP”. eWeek. Retrieved September 9, 2018.
  8. ^ Kerravala, Zeus (June 2016). “Tempered Networks simplifies network security”. Network World. Retrieved September 10, 2018.
  9. ^ Bednarz, Ann. (March 2018). “Penn State secures building automation, IoT traffic with microsegmentation”. Network World. Retrieved September 11, 2018.
  10. ^ Kennedy, Sheila (July 2018). “The road to prescriptive maintenance”. Plant Services. Retrieved September 11, 2018.
  11. ^ Vanian, Jonathon (March 2015). “Tempered Networks wants to secure critical infrastructure so hacks don’t lead to sewage spills”. Gigaom. Retrieved September 9, 2018.
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