Kentik

American Internet measurement company From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kentik is an American network observability, network monitoring and anomaly detection company headquartered in San Francisco, California.[2][3]

Company typePrivate
IndustryInternet
Founded2014; 12 years ago (2014) in San Francisco, California, United States
Founders
Quick facts Company type, Industry ...
Kentik
Company typePrivate
IndustryInternet
Founded2014; 12 years ago (2014) in San Francisco, California, United States
Founders
Headquarters,
United States[1]
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Websitekentik.com
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History

Kentik was founded in 2014 as CloudHelix by Co-founders Avi Freedman, Ian Applegate, Ian Pye, and Justin Biegel. The company changed its name to Kentik in 2015.[4]

Technology

Kentik's Network Observability Cloud is a software-as-a-service (SaaS) product that ingests NetFlow and other network data and analyzes it to provide network monitoring and anomaly detection services for the operators of Internet-connected networks. Kentik's underlying data engine is a clustered datastore modeled on Dremel.[5] The engine collects and correlates live operational data from Internet routers and switches to produce network activity and health information.

Analysis

Since November 2020, Kentik has been the organizational home of Doug Madory's Internet routing analysis practice, previously associated with Renesys and Renesys' subsequent acquirers DynDNS and Oracle. While employed by Kentik, Madory discovered the Global Resource Systems IP address hijacking which occurred during the final hours of the Trump administration[6][7][8][9] and was the first to accurately quantify the 2021 Facebook outage, the largest communications outage in history.[10][11][12][13][14][15]

References

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