Black Duck Software

Black Duck Software, Inc.
Privately held
Industry Open Source Security Software
Founded Massachusetts, USA (2002)
Headquarters Burlington, MA
Key people
Lou Shipley, President & CEO
Stephen Gregorio, CFO
Bill Ledingham, CTO
Bob Canaway, CMO
Adam Clay, VP of Worldwide Sales
Products Black Duck Hub
Black Duck Protex
Black Duck Code Center
Website www.BlackDuckSoftware.com

Black Duck Software is a privately held software company headquartered in Burlington, Massachusetts that specializes in assisting companies to secure and manage their use of open source software (OSS). Black Duck has partnerships with a variety of open source organizations including Red Hat, the Open Source Software Institute (OSSI), and SourceForge.

Headquartered in Burlington, MA, Black Duck has offices in San Jose, CA; Frankfurt, Germany; Reading, United Kingdom; Tokyo, Japan; and Seoul, South Korea.

Products & Services

Black Duck markets products and services as solutions that allow organizations to analyze the composition of their software, search for reusable code, manage open source and third-party approval, honor legal obligations, and monitor related security vulnerabilities. The company promotes its products and services as follows:

History

Black Duck Software was founded in 2002 by Douglas Levin in Waltham, Massachusetts. The company moved its corporate headquarters to Burlington, MA in 2011.[1] Lou Shipley joined the company in 2013 as President and CEO.[2] In a 2016 press release, Black Duck reported the company had 230 employees.[3]

In 2004, Black Duck completed its first round of venture capital funding, acquiring investments from Flagship Ventures and General Catalyst Partners totaling $5 million USD.[4] In 2005, a second round of investments came in equaling $12 million USD from a combination of sources: Fidelity Ventures of Boston, Intel Capital, SAP Ventures, and Red Hat.[5] In February 2007, Black Duck acquired a round of investments totaling $12 million USD from Focus Ventures and past investors.[6] In 2009, Black Duck announcing it had received $9.5 million in new financing, including Gold Hill Capital and existing investors.[7] In 2011, the company raised an additional $12 million from various investors.[8] In July 2014, Black Duck received a $20 million investment from a combination of General Catalyst Partners and other past investors.[9]

References

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