| Company type | Private |
|---|---|
| Industry | Information Management |
| Founded | 1983; 43 years ago (1983) (as Tolerant Systems) January 29, 2016; 10 years ago (2016-01-29) (as Veritas Technologies) |
| Founders | Eli Alon Dale Shipley |
| Headquarters | Santa Clara, California, US |
Key people | Greg Hughes (CEO) |
| Owner |
|
Number of employees | 7,000 (2020) |
| Website | veritas |
Veritas Technologies LLC is an American internationaldata management company headquartered inSanta Clara, California. The company has its origins inTolerant Systems, founded in 1983 and later renamedVeritas Software. It specializes in storage management software including the first commercialjournaling file system,VxFS,VxVM,VCS, the personal/small office backup softwareBackup Exec and the enterprisebackupsoftware, NetBackup. Veritas Record Now was an early CD recording software.
Before merging with Symantec (now known asGen Digital) in 2004, Veritas was listed on theS&P 500 and theNASDAQ-100 under the VRTS ticker symbol.
In 2014, Symantec announced that it would demerge itsinformation management business as Veritas Technologies LLC, to focus on security. It was purchased as part of thedemerger by theprivate equity firmThe Carlyle Group for $8 billion in cash in 2016.[1] Its data protection and data security unit was sold in 2024 to software firmCohesity, valued at $3 billion. Remaining part of Veritas Technologies later spun-off into an independent company called Arctera.
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The company was founded by Eli Alon and Dale Shipley (both fromIntel) as Tolerant Systems in 1983 to buildfault-tolerant computer systems based on the idea of "shoe box" building blocks. The shoe box consisted of an OS processor, running a version ofUnix calledTX, and on which applications ran, and anI/O processor, running a Real Time Executive, developed by Tolerant, called RTE: both processors were320xx processors. The system was marketed as the "Eternity Series."[2]
The TX software gained a level of fault-tolerance throughcheck-pointing technology. Applications needed to be fortified with this check-pointing to allow roll-back of the application on another processor if a hardware failure occurred. Tolerant also developed a forerunner of today'sRAID systems by incorporating ajournaling file system and multiple copies of the disk drive content.

Dale Shipley formed Tolerant Software in January 1988. Tolerant Software produced a journaling file system and avirtual disk management system for theAT&T UNIX platform, which was built by a new team led by John Carmichael.
The firm started out with a relationship with AT&T to provide the file (Veritas File System – VxFS) and disk management (Veritas Volume Manager – VxVM) software for its UNIX operating system, and to jointly market and support the products to the System OEMS (Sun,HP, etc.). TheOEM model provided royalties to Veritas when the OEM shipped its products to end users.
On December 9, 1993, the company had itsinitial public offering (IPO), selling 16 million shares to the public, and valuing the company at $64 million.
At the end of 1996, Veritas had revenues of $36 million.
In 1998, Veritas decided to consolidate most of its offices to one corporate headquarters in Mountain View and hired Ernst and Young to plan the new 550,000 sq ft facility. David Bentley of EY led the team to hire HOK as the architect and Rudolf and Sletten as the general contractor. The new facility was completed in 2001 along the newlight rail facility. On December 16, 2004, Veritas andSymantec announced their plans for a merger in a deal valued at $13.5 billion. The deal created the fourth-largest software firm in the world to date.[5] Veritas and Symantec'sshareholders approved the merger on June 24, 2005, and it was completed on July 2.
On October 10, 2014, Symantec announced it planned to split the company into two parts.[6] The security business would remain with Symantec, and the information management business would be known as Veritas Technologies Corporation. The separation of the companies was completed on January 29, 2016.[7]
On August 11, 2015, Symantec announced the sale of its Veritas information management business toThe Carlyle Group.[8] Veritas and Symantec achieved operational separation on October 1, 2015. The sale completed on January 30, 2016, when Veritas became a privately held company.[8][9] The sale to go private was for $8 billion, and represented a mark-down on Symantec stock.[10]
After the demerger from Symantec in 2016, Veritas rebranded itself as Veritas Technologies LLC. with a new logo. As CEO, Bill Coleman was able to transform the company to have "a startup, win-in-the-marketplace, customer-first culture" during the two-year turnaround.[11] On January 28, 2018, Veritas Technologies LLC. named Greg Hughes as its CEO.[12] With a new brand and a new CEO, Veritas Technologies planned to move its employees to its new headquarters in Santa Clara by the end of summer 2018.[13] In September 2020, Veritas Technologies LLC acquired Los Angeles–based software company Globanet.[14]
Cohesity acquired Veritas' data protection and data security unit (including Veritas Alta and NetBackup) in February 2024 for a deal valued at $7 billion, with Veritas being valued in the deal at $3 billion as per a Reuters report.[15][16] The acquisition was completed in December 2024.[17] There were some remaining parts of Veritas that Cohesity did not acquire, among themBackup Exec, data compliance, data governance, and InfoScale. These non-Cohesity businesses were separated into an independent company called Arctera, which continued ownership by The Carlyle Group,[18][19] until Arctera's sale toCloud Software Group in August 2025.
The following list includes products and services of Veritas Technologies before the Cohesity acquisition and the spin-off of Arctera.
In 1999, VERITAS Software Corp. (VERITAS US) and VERITAS Ireland entered into acost-sharing agreement (CSA) which was the subject of litigation with the U.S. Internal Revenue Service.[21]