The Simple Story Everyone Knows
The popular version of Linode’s history is inspiring and straightforward. In 2003, founder Christopher Aker started the company, a portmanteau of “Linux” and “node,” to make cloud hosting more accessible and affordable. For nearly two decades, the company grew
steadily without taking venture capital, earning a loyal following among developers who appreciated its simple pricing, solid performance, and developer-friendly tools. This journey reached its storybook conclusion in early 2022 when Akamai, a giant in content delivery and security, acquired Linode for approximately $900 million. It’s a perfect tale of a founder’s vision paying off, proving an independent company could thrive and then cash out. It’s a great story. It’s just not the whole story.
Pioneering a Market That Didn’t Exist
When Linode launched, the concept of a Virtual Private Server (VPS) was not the mainstream commodity it is today. Aker was a pioneer in a market that giants like Amazon Web Services had yet to dominate. Being early meant building much of the backend, website, and user controls from scratch. This wasn’t just a clever business idea; it was a technical gamble on virtualization before it was a proven, widely adopted technology. The mission was to democratize cloud computing, making it easier and more accessible long before “the cloud” was a household term. This early innovation set the company’s DNA, but it also meant navigating uncharted territory without a map, a far cry from simply launching a product into a ready-made market.
The Bootstrapping Tightrope Walk
The decision to bootstrap—funding growth with its own revenue instead of outside investment—is a core part of Linode’s identity. While this afforded creative control, it was also a relentless grind. Competitors like DigitalOcean took on massive venture capital funding, allowing them to burn cash to acquire customers and scale infrastructure at a blistering pace. Linode had to be profitable from the start. Every server expansion was a carefully calculated risk, paid for by existing customers. This capital efficiency was a badge of honor, but it also meant growth could be slower and that the company was always just a few bad months away from serious trouble. It was less a story of pure freedom and more a high-wire act of disciplined growth in the face of cash-flush rivals.
Surviving the Storms
A simple success story rarely includes the near-disasters. Over the years, Linode faced significant and painful security challenges. The company endured multiple high-profile Distributed Denial-of-Service (DDoS) attacks that crippled its services, including a particularly “catastrophic” one over a holiday weekend in 2016. In another incident, the company had to reset user passwords after credentials were found on an external machine, a humbling moment for a provider trusted with its customers' infrastructure. These weren't minor hiccups; they were serious threats to its business and reputation. Overcoming them required immense effort and resilience, shaping the company's security posture and proving its mettle in ways a smooth ride never could.
An Ending and a New Beginning
The $900 million acquisition by Akamai in 2022 wasn't just a happy payday; it was a strategic pivot and the end of an era for one of the industry's most prominent independent cloud providers. For Akamai, acquiring Linode was a way to instantly add developer-friendly computing to its massive edge network, creating a comprehensive platform to build, run, and secure applications. For Linode, it marked the logical conclusion of its journey. Founder Christopher Aker noted that modern customer challenges required a level of integration and scale that the partnership with Akamai could provide. While a huge financial success, the move also brought a sense of loss for some longtime users who cherished Linode's independent, bootstrapped identity. It wasn't just an exit, but a transformation into something new: Akamai Connected Cloud.













