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Lookout Mobile Security

Lookout
Private
Industry Computer software, Security software, Mobile Security
Founded December 21, 2009; 7 years ago (2009-12-21) (as Flexilis)
United States
Founder John Hering, Kevin Mahaffey, and James Burgess
Headquarters San Francisco, California, U.S.
Key people
John Hering (Co-founder and Executive Chairman)
Jim Dolce (CEO)
Products Lookout Mobile Security
Website www.lookout.com

Lookout (previously known as Flexilis) is a San Francisco-based mobile security company. It provides security to both private and business mobile devices.

Lookout is a mobile security firm started by graduates of the University of Southern California. The original name of the company was Flexilis. In 2005, the firm showed the vulnerabilities of smartphones to hacking via Bluetooth, in addition to other problems in mobile security. In 2009 Khosla Ventures provided $5.5 million in funding to the company as it began developing mobile security software. The programs were initially tested on Android and Windows devices, before expanding to Blackberry and iPhone devices. The software was intended to protect mobile devices from malicious programs, as well as allowing users to back up and delete data from their devices. The co-founders of Flexilis and Lookout are John Hering, who serves as Lookout's executive chairman, James Burgess, and Kevin Mahaffey. The principal research analyst for the company until 2014 was Marc Rogers. Jim Dolce serves as the company's CEO.

Lookout was in use by about ten million devices within a year and a half after its official launch in 2009. As of late 2013, the company had raised $131 million in venture capital and was valued at about $1 billion. Previous investors include Andreessen Horowitz, Khosla Ventures, Accel Partners, Deutsche Telekom, and Index Ventures. Its security software had about 45 million users as of October 2013. This was about three times the downloads of other companies producing mobile security software and included pre-loads from telecom carriers like Sprint, Orange Mobile, and T-Mobile.

In August 2014 the company raised $150 million in series F financing. This brought the total of financing the firm has received is $280 million. In October the company signed a partnership agreement with KDDI in Japan. In November of that year they hired Aaron Cockerill as VP of Enterprise Product and David Helfer as VP of Worldwide Channel Development. That month the company released the first evidence of malware and spam in Android smart phones, encountering the NotCompatible malicious software in 2012, and showed that at least four million mobile users may have encountered it since. In 2014 the company was also the first to detect the MalApp.D, a VoIP software-based malware.

The firm produces mobile security apps for iOS and Android devices. The free edition is upgradeable to a premium version which includes a phishing and malicious website blocker, privacy advisor, photo and call history backup, device-to-device data transfer, remote locking and wiping, and support services. The software also includes the ability to remotely snap a photograph of the phone's environment when lost or stolen, which can help to identify the thief or location of the device. In June 2014 the company released an app that produces real-time theft alerts, including a "theftie"--photograph of the thief taken automatically by the device--when certain actions are taken, such as a mistyped phone code. The software bundle also comes with a utility called "signal flare", which automatically flags the location of a phone once the battery starts to die, so that the device user can later ping its last known location.


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