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Shlomo Kramer

Israeli information technology entrepreneur From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Shlomo Kramer (Hebrew: שלמה קרמר; born 1966),[1][2] is an Israeli information technology entrepreneur and investor. He is the co-founder of cyber-security companies Check Point[3] and Imperva, as well as Cato Networks, a cloud-based network security provider.

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As of January 27, 2024, Forbes listed Shlomo Kramer net worth at US$2.2 billion, ranking him 1412 on the Billionaires list[4] and he was ranked 17th among the top wealthiest people in Israel.[5]

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Personal life

Shlomo Kramer has been actively involved with technology all his life. As a youth, he worked on mainframes and sold video games.[6]

Kramer served in the Israel Defense Forces' Unit 8200, a crack cybersecurity and intelligence team whose operations include gathering, analyzing and decrypting data; over the years, the unit has produced many of Israel's top high-tech entrepreneurs.[7] After completing his military service, Kramer earned a master's degree in Computer Science from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and a bachelor's degree in Mathematics and Computer Science from Tel Aviv University.[8]

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Career

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Kramer, who has been called "the godfather of Israeli cybersecurity," is a serial high-tech investor and entrepreneur with "a long track record of success".[9] He founded his first startup during high school in the 1980s along with Ofer Shemtov, and the company was later sold to a software firm.[10] In 1993, he co-founded Check Point Software along with Gil Shwed and Marius Nacht;[11] the company introduced the first firewall to the commercial market[12] and went on to become "a world leader in protecting the information that flows round the Internet, and a flagship of Israel's high-tech industry".[13] Kramer left Check Point in 1998 and used the money from the sale of his stake to strike out on his own as an entrepreneur and investor in numerous startups.[3][14]

In 2002, Kramer founded his second startup, WebCohort, renamed Imperva in 2004, together with Mickey Boodaei and Amichai Shulman.[15][16] Imperva moved away from perimeter defenses such as firewalls and instead deployed its software to protect against hackers and business-data theft by identifying and preventing attacks before they find their way to the inside of an organization.[17]

The company's initial public offering on the New York Stock Exchange raised $90 million, with its shares gaining 33% on its first day of trading on 9 November 2011.[18] In 2014, Imperva acquired Skyfence, a cloud security gateway startup in which Kramer was a lead investor, and bought the shares it did not already own in Incapsula, a cloud-based website performance and security service in which it had already invested.[19] The acquisitions helped Imperva extend its data security strategy throughout the cloud.[20]

Kramer's belief in the cloud as the next big development in cybersecurity[17] led him to establish Cato Networks in 2015, together with former Imperva colleague Gur Shatz.[21] Kramer acted as the Cato Network's CEO since its inception.[10] Cato Networks' software integrates all the elements of an organization's network – including branch locations, data centers, mobile users and more – into one encrypted network in the cloud. This means the enterprise is no longer tied to an array of location-bound appliances to protect its data.

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Investments

In addition to co-founding Check Point, Imperva and Cato Networks, Kramer has invested in many companies and startups including Palo Alto Networks, Exabeam, Trusteer, WatchDox and LightCyber,[21][10] mostly in the field of data security.

See also

References

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