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==Criticisms and controversy==
==Criticisms and controversy==
===Cheif Financial Officer Changes===
===Cheif Financial Officer Changes===
In April 2009, even after substantial profits while the rest of the world was suffering from the global economic crisis, a new CFO was appointed to the company after recognition of his epic rols in educating the world by resolving flame wars online, This isn't the first time that someone has come to fame from Wikipedia, well actually yes it is, considering that he is the first. On second thoughts wait, he isn't the CFO, he is a tool.
In April 2009, even after substantial profits while the rest of the world was suffering from the global economic crisis, a new CFO, Steve Crossin was appointed to the company after recognition of his epic rolls in educating the world by resolving flame wars online, This isn't the first time that someone has come to fame from Wikipedia, well actually yes it is, considering that he is the first. On second thoughts wait, he isn't the CFO, he is a tool.


===Cisco lawsuit against Huawei===
===Cisco lawsuit against Huawei===

Revision as of 03:20, 20 April 2009

Cisco Systems, Inc.
Company typePublic (NASDAQ: CSCO)
IndustryComputer networking
FoundedSan Francisco, California, USA (1984)
Headquarters
Key people
John T. Chambers, Chairman and CEO, Steve Crossin, CFO
RevenueIncrease$39.540 billion USD (2008)
Increase $9.442 billion USD (2008)
Increase $8.052 billion USD (2008)
Total assets104,900,000,000 United States dollar (2015) Edit this on Wikidata
Number of employees
66,050 (2008)
Websitehttp://www.cisco.com

Cisco Systems, Inc. (Template:Nasdaq2, SEHK4333) is a multinational corporation with more than 66,000 employees and annual revenue of US$39 billion as of 2008. Headquartered in San Jose, California, it designs and sells networking and communications technology and services.

Corporate history

One of the many buildings on the Cisco Systems campus in San Jose

Len Bosack and Sandy Lerner, a married couple who worked as computer operations staff at Stanford University, later joined by Richard Troiano, founded cisco Systems in 1984. Lerner moved on to direct computer services at Schlumberger, moving full time to Cisco in 1987. The name "Cisco" was derived from the city name, San Francisco, which is why the company's engineers insisted on using the lower case 'cisco' in the early days. For Cisco's first product, Bosack adapted multiple-protocol router software originally written some years before by William Yeager, another Stanford employee who later joined Sun Microsystems.

While Cisco was not the first company to develop and sell a router,[2] it was one of the first to sell commercially successful routers supporting multiple network protocols.[3] As the Internet Protocol (IP) became widely adopted, the importance of multi-protocol routing declined. Today, Cisco's largest routers are primarily used to deliver a multitude of technologies through corporate, enterprise, and service provider networks. Some of the more notable technologies and protocols are IP, MPLS, Frame Relay and SONET.

In 1990, the company was listed on the Nasdaq stock exchange. Lerner was fired and because of that, Bosack quit but not before receiving $200 million. Most of those profits were given to charities and the two later divorced.

Cisco acquired a variety of companies to bring in talent and innovation into the company. Several acquisitions, such as Stratacom, were the biggest deals when they happened. During the Internet boom in 1999, the company acquired Cerent Corp., a start-up company located in Petaluma, California, for about US$7 billion. It was the most expensive acquisition made by Cisco at that time. Since then, only Cisco's acquisition of Scientific-Atlanta has been bigger. Although not every acquisition is successful, Cisco has more frequently succeeded in integrating and growing the revenue of its acquisitions than its competitors. Several acquired companies have grown into $1Bn+ business units for Cisco in LAN switching, Enterprise VOIP, and home networking.

In late March 2000, at the height of the dot-com boom, Cisco was the most valuable company in the world, with a market capitalization of more than US$500 billion.[4][5] In April 2009, with a market cap of about US$104 billion[6], it is still one of the most valuable companies.[7] CISCO was voted stock of the decade on NASDAQ. The company's 7500 Series router was voted 3rd in the product of the decade 1990-2000 behind the Mosaic web browser and the Novell LAN manager.

Cisco has made inroads into many network equipment markets outside routing, including Ethernet switching, remote access, branch office routers, ATM networking, security, IP telephony, and others. In 2003, Cisco acquired Linksys, a popular manufacturer of computer networking hardware and positioned it as a leading brand for the home and end user networking market (SOHO).

The company's first two CEOs are John Morgridge and John Chambers[8] (active). The Corporate Headquarters is on East Tasman Drive in San Jose, California, between Zanker Road and Cisco Way.

The company was a 2002-03 recipient of the Ron Brown Award.

Cisco's vision is "Changing the Way We Work, Live, Play and Learn." Cisco's current tagline is "Welcome to the human network."[9]

Products and services

Partial list of hardware products

A Cisco ASM/2-32EM router deployed at CERN in 1987.
  • Application Network Services
  • Broadband Cable products: uBR7100 series, uBR7200 series, uBR10012 CMTSes. A line of Cable modems, the uBR900 series and CVA122 series, were also made in the late 1990s and early 2000s, but have since been discontinued.
    • Clean Access Server
  • Content Networking
  • DSL & Long Reach Ethernet
  • Interoperability Systems
  • Cisco LocalDirector load-balancing appliance
  • Optical Networking series: 15xxx Series: 15302, 15305, 15310, 15327, 15454, 15600, 1580x, 15900(wavelength router, but end for sale)
  • Micro Webservers: 100, 200
  • Routers: AGS, AGS+, MGS, IGS, CGS, SB107, 700, 800, 837, 1000 Series, 1600 Series, 1700, 1800, 2500 Series, 2600 Series, 2800, 3600, 3700, 3800, 4000 Series, 4500, 7000 Series, 7100/7200/7300/7400 Mid Range Customer Edge/Service Provider Edge family, 7500, 7600, 10000, 12000, and CRS-1
  • Security & VPN products: Anomaly Detection and Mitigation Appliances, Cisco AVS 3110 Application Velocity System, Cisco ASA 5500 Series Adaptive Security Appliances, Cisco PIX 500 Series Security Appliances, Cisco VPN 3000 Series Concentrators, Cisco Catalyst 6500 Series/7600 Series WebVPN Services Module, IPSec VPN Services Module (VPNSM) for Cisco Catalyst 6500 Switches and Cisco 7600 Series Routers
  • Server Networking & Virtualization
  • SPA Phone Adapters
  • Storage networking
  • Switches
    • Catalyst series: 500 and 520 Express, 1900 Series, 2900, 2950, 2960, 3560 and 3560E, 3750 and 3750E, 4500, 6500 Nexus 7000 switch and Nexus 5000/2000 switch (from the Nuova Systems Inc. acquisition] etc..
    • Metro Ethernet ME 3400 Series Access Switches
    • MGX 8800 Series Multiservice Switches: MGX 8830, MGX 8850
    • MDS 9000 Series Multilayer SAN Switches
    • Nexus 1000V distributed virtual software switch[10]
  • Universal Gateways & Access Servers
  • Video
  • Cisco Telepresence
  • Voice & IP Communications: 7900 Series IP Phones: 7936, 7906G, 7912G, 7911G, 7920, 7921G, 7911G, 7921G, 7931G, 7940G, 7941G, 7941G-GE, 7960G, 7961G, 7961G-GE, 7970G, 7971G-GE, 7975G and 7985G
  • Wireless: Wireless Integrated Switches and Routers,Wireless IP Telephony, Wireless LAN Access, Aironet Wireless Bridges and Workgroup Bridges, Cisco Wireless LAN Client Adapters (PCI and PCMCIA), Wireless LAN Controllers, Wireless Network Management, Wireless LAN Management, Wireless Security Servers, Wireless IP Phone 7920

Partial list of software products

Cisco Systems VPN Client

The Cisco Systems VPN Client is an executable program that allows Linux, Mac OS X, Solaris and Windows based computers to connect to a Virtual Private Network (VPN). The client makes remote resources of another network available in a secure way as if the user was connected directly to that "private" network. The software is not free but is often installed on university and business computers in accordance with a site-license.

Cisco AnyConnect VPN Client

Cisco has recently released a new VPN client called Cisco AnyConnect VPN. The Cisco AnyConnect VPN uses TLS and DTLS as the tunneling protocol instead of the legacy IPSec mechanism. The AnyConnect client is supported on almost all 32 and 64 bit versions Windows, including Win7; Linux; Mac OS X Intel and PPC; and Windows Mobile Touch Screen Devices 5, 6, 6.1, but excluding Windows 2003 Server. This new client is growing in popularity because it supports 64 bit operating systems.

VoIP services

Cisco became a major provider of Voice over IP to enterprises, and is now moving into the home user market through its acquisitions of Scientific Atlanta and Linksys. Scientific Atlanta provides VoIP equipment to cable service providers such as Time Warner, Cablevision, Rogers Communications, UPC, and others; Linksys has partnered with companies such as Skype and Yahoo to integrate consumer VoIP services with wireless and cordless phones.

Criticisms and controversy

Cheif Financial Officer Changes

In April 2009, even after substantial profits while the rest of the world was suffering from the global economic crisis, a new CFO was appointed to the company after recognition of his epic rols in educating the world by resolving flame wars online, This isn't the first time that someone has come to fame from Wikipedia, well actually yes it is, considering that he is the first. On second thoughts wait, he isn't the CFO, he is a tool.

China

Cisco has been criticized for its involvement in censorship in the People's Republic of China.[11] According to author Ethan Gutmann, Cisco and other telecommunications equipment providers supplied the Chinese government with surveillance and Internet infrastructure equipment that is used to block Internet websites and track Chinese on-line activities. Cisco says that it does not customize or develop specialized or unique filtering capabilities to enable governments or regimes to block access to information and that it sells the same equipment in China as it sells worldwide.[12] Leaked documents suggests that Cisco sees information control in China as a good commercial opportunity.[13]

Shareholder class action lawsuit against Cisco

On August 18, 2006 Cisco reached a settlement in a long-standing class action lawsuit that originated in 2001. "The original suit, filed April 20, 2001, claimed that the company made misleading statements, or omitted statements of material fact, that were relied on by purchasers of Cisco stock. It also alleged that the individual defendants sold Cisco stock while in possession of material, non-public information. Cisco denied all allegations in the suit."[14] While Cisco denies all wrongdoing in the suit, it agreed to settle with the plaintiffs. Cisco's liability insurers, its directors, and officers paid the plaintiffs US$91.75 million to settle the suit.[15]

Criticisms and controversy

Cheif Financial Officer Changes

In April 2009, even after substantial profits while the rest of the world was suffering from the global economic crisis, a new CFO, Steve Crossin was appointed to the company after recognition of his epic rolls in educating the world by resolving flame wars online, This isn't the first time that someone has come to fame from Wikipedia, well actually yes it is, considering that he is the first. On second thoughts wait, he isn't the CFO, he is a tool.

Cisco lawsuit against Huawei

On January 23, 2003, Cisco sued Huawei Technologies, Co., Ltd and its subsidiaries, Huawei America, Inc. and FutureWei Technologies, Inc. over Huawei's unlawful copying of Cisco's intellectual property.[16] The suit alleged that Huawei "unlawfully copied and misappropriated Cisco's IOS software... and infringed numerous Cisco patents." Cisco suspended the patent infringement lawsuit on October 1, 2003, after Huawei agreed to modify some of their products.

Cisco's Brazil Tax Fraud Investigation

On October 16, 2007, the Brazilian Federal Police and Brazilian Receita Federal (equivalent to the American IRS) under the "Persona Operation" uncovered an alleged tax fraud scheme employed by Cisco Systems since 2002 that exempted the company from paying over R$1.5 billion (US$824 million) in taxes.[17][18]

Free Software Foundation suit

On December 11, 2008, the Free Software Foundation filed suit against Cisco (see FSF vs. Cisco) regarding Cisco's failure to comply with the GPL and LGPL license models and make the applicable source code publicly available.[19]

See also

References

  1. ^ "CSCO". Retrieved 2009-01-30.
  2. ^ "I, Cringely . NerdTV . Transcript | PBS". Pbs.org. Retrieved 2008-11-13.
  3. ^ Pennell, Ian (June 14, 2004). "The Evolution of Access Routing" (Interview). Cisco. Retrieved 2009-01-04. {{cite interview}}: More than one of |subject= and |last= specified (help)
  4. ^ "Cisco pushes past Microsoft in market value". CBS Marketwatch. 2000-03-25. Retrieved 2007-01-25.
  5. ^ "Cisco replaces Microsoft as world's most valuable company". Reuters. The Indian Express. 2000-03-25. Retrieved 2007-01-25.
  6. ^ Cisco Systems Summary
  7. ^ Fost, Dan (2006-05-05). "Chron 200 Market capitalization". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2007-01-25.
  8. ^ http://wiki.riteme.site/wiki/John_Chambers_(CEO)
  9. ^ "The Human Network". Cisco Systems, Inc. Retrieved 2007-01-25.
  10. ^ "Virtual Networking Features of the VMware vNetwork Distributed Switch and Cisco Nexus 1000V Series Switches" (PDF). {{cite web}}: line feed character in |title= at position 51 (help)
  11. ^ "FRONTLINE: the tank man: the struggle to control information | PBS". Pbs.org. Retrieved 2008-11-13.
  12. ^ Earnhardt, John (2006-02-15). "Cisco Testimony Before House International Relations Subcommittee". Cisco Systems, Inc. Retrieved 2007-01-25.
  13. ^ "Leaked Cisco Internal Memo".
  14. ^ "Cisco Shareholder Class Action Lawsuit Resolved" (Press release). Cisco Systems, Inc. 2006-08-18. Retrieved 2007-01-25.
  15. ^ "Cisco resolves class action lawsuit". Silicon Valley/San Jose Business Journal. 2006-08-18. Retrieved 2007-01-25.
  16. ^ "Cisco Files Lawsuit Against Huawei Technologies" (Press release). Cisco Systems, Inc. 2003-01-23. Retrieved 2007-01-25.
  17. ^ "Cisco offices raided, executives arrested in Brazil: reports". NetworkWorld. 2007-10-16. Retrieved 2007-10-16.
  18. ^ "Brazilian tax authorities raid, close Cisco System's offices in Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro" (Press release). International Herald Tribune. 2007-10-17. Retrieved 2007-10-17.
  19. ^ "Free Software Foundation Files Suit Against Cisco For GPL Violations" (Press release). BOSTON, Massachusetts: Free Software Foundation. December 11, 2008. Retrieved 2009-01-04.
  • Business data for Cisco Systems:

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