CUSEEME NETWORKS INC
DEF 14A, 2000-06-20
PREPACKAGED SOFTWARE
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<PAGE>
                                  SCHEDULE 14A
                                 (RULE 14a-101)

                    INFORMATION REQUIRED IN PROXY STATEMENT
                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

                  Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of
                      the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

<TABLE>
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      /X/        Definitive Proxy Statement
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      / /        Soliciting Material Pursuant to Rule 14a-11(c) or Rule
                 14a-12

                   CUSEEME NETWORKS, INC.
      -----------------------------------------------------------------------
                 (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)

      -----------------------------------------------------------------------
           (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the
                                    Registrant)
</TABLE>

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<TABLE>
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                                     [LOGO]

                             CUSEEME NETWORKS, INC.
                               542 AMHERST STREET
                          NASHUA, NEW HAMPSHIRE 03063

                 NOTICE OF 2000 ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

Dear Stockholder:

    We invite you to attend the 2000 Annual Meeting of Stockholders of CUseeMe
Networks, Inc. (formerly White Pine Software, Inc.), which is being held as
follows:

<TABLE>
<S>                  <C>
DATE:                Wednesday, August 2, 2000
TIME:                10 A.M.
LOCATION:            Crowne Plaza
                     Trafalgar Square Suite
                     2 Somerset Parkway
                     Nashua, New Hampshire 03063-1036
</TABLE>

    At the Meeting, we will ask you and our other stockholders to:

       - elect four directors, who would constitute our entire board of
         directors;

       - approve the amendment of our 1996 Incentive and Nonqualified Stock
         Option Plan in order to increase the aggregate number of shares of
         common stock available for grant thereunder from 1,000,000 to
         2,400,000; and

       - consider any other business properly presented at the Meeting.

    You may vote on these matters in person or by proxy. Whether you plan to
attend the Meeting or not, we ask that you complete and return the enclosed
proxy card promptly in the enclosed addressed, postage-paid envelope, so that
your shares will be represented and voted at the Meeting in accordance with your
wishes. If you attend the Meeting, you may withdraw your proxy and vote your
shares in person. Only stockholders of record at the close of business on
June 14, 2000 may vote at the Meeting.

                                        By order of the board of directors,

                                        /s/ Mark L. Johnson

                                                    Mark L. Johnson
                                                       SECRETARY

June 19, 1999
<PAGE>
                                PROXY STATEMENT
                                    FOR THE
                             CUSEEME NETWORKS, INC.
                      (FORMERLY WHITE PINE SOFTWARE, INC.)
                      2000 ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

                               TABLE OF CONTENTS

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                              PAGE
                                                              ----
<S>                                                           <C>
               INFORMATION ABOUT THE MEETING

This Proxy Solicitation.....................................    2
How to Vote.................................................    2
Quorum Required to Transact Business........................    3
Availability of Auditors....................................    3

                  DISCUSSION OF PROPOSALS

Proposal One: Election of Directors.........................    4
Proposal Two: Approval of Amendment of Stock Option Plan....    5
Other Matters...............................................    8
Stockholder Proposals for 2001 Annual Meeting...............    8

           ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ABOUT DIRECTORS

Board Meetings..............................................    9
Board Committees............................................    9
Director Compensation.......................................    9

            INFORMATION ABOUT EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

Background Information About Executive Officers.............   11
Executive Officer Compensation..............................   12
Related Party Transactions..................................   14

             INFORMATION ABOUT STOCK OWNERSHIP

Stock Owned by Directors, Executive Officers and
  Greater-than-5% Stockholders..............................   15
Compliance with Reporting Requirements......................   16
</TABLE>
<PAGE>
                         INFORMATION ABOUT THE MEETING

THIS PROXY SOLICITATION

    We have sent you this proxy statement and the enclosed proxy card because
our board of directors is soliciting your proxy to vote at the Meeting,
including any adjournment or postponement of the Meeting.

    - THIS PROXY STATEMENT summarizes information about the proposals to be
      considered at the Meeting and other information you may find useful in
      determining how to vote.

    - THE PROXY CARD is the means by which you actually authorize another person
      to vote your shares in accordance with your instructions.

    We are paying the costs of soliciting these proxies. Our directors, officers
and employees may solicit proxies in person or by mail, telephone, facsimile or
electronic mail. We expect that the expense of any solicitation will be nominal.
We will reimburse brokers and other nominee holders of shares for expenses they
incur in forwarding proxy materials to beneficial owners of those shares. We
have not retained the services of any proxy solicitation firm to assist us in
this solicitation.

    We are mailing this proxy statement and the enclosed proxy card to
stockholders for the first time on or about June 19, 2000. In this mailing, we
are including a copy of our 1999 Annual Report to Stockholders, which includes a
copy of our Annual Report on Form 10-KSB for the fiscal year ended December 31,
1999 as filed with the SEC.

HOW TO VOTE

    You are entitled to one vote at the Meeting for each share of common stock
registered in your name at the close of business on June 14, 2000. The proxy
card states the number of shares you are entitled to vote at the Meeting.

    You may vote your shares at the Meeting in person or by proxy:

    - TO VOTE IN PERSON, you must attend the Meeting, and then complete and
      submit the ballot provided at the Meeting.

    - TO VOTE BY PROXY, you must complete and return the enclosed proxy card.
      Your proxy will be valid only if you sign, date and return it before the
      Meeting. By completing and returning the proxy card, you will direct the
      designated persons to vote your shares at the Meeting in the manner you
      specify in the proxy card. If you complete all of the proxy card except
      the voting instructions, then the designated persons will vote your shares
      for the election of the nominated directors and for the approval of the
      amendment of our 1996 Incentive and Nonqualified Stock Option Plan. If any
      other business properly comes before the meeting, the designated persons
      will have the discretion to vote as they deem appropriate.

    If you complete and return a proxy, you may revoke it at any time before it
is exercised by taking one of the following actions:

    - send written notice of your revocation to our Secretary at the following
      address:

      Mark L. Johnson
                 Hale and Dorr LLP
                 60 State Street
                 Boston, Massachusetts 02109

    - send us another signed proxy with a later date; or

    - attend the Meeting, notify the Secretary that you are present, and then
      vote in person.

                                       2
<PAGE>
QUORUM REQUIRED TO TRANSACT BUSINESS

    At the close of business on June 14, 2000, 12,214,169 shares of common stock
were outstanding. Our by-laws require that a majority of the outstanding common
stock be represented, in person or by proxy, at the Meeting in order to
constitute the quorum we need to transact business. We will count abstentions
and broker non-votes in determining whether a quorum exists.

AVAILABILITY OF AUDITORS

    Our board of directors has selected Ernst & Young LLP as independent public
accountants to audit our financial statements for the fiscal year ending
December 31, 2000. Ernst & Young LLP have served as our auditors since 1994. We
expect that representatives of Ernst & Young LLP will attend the Meeting, will
have an opportunity to make a statement if they desire to do so, and will be
available to respond to appropriate questions.

                                       3
<PAGE>
                            DISCUSSION OF PROPOSALS

PROPOSAL ONE: ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

    The first proposal on the agenda for the Meeting is the election of four
persons to serve as directors for one-year terms beginning at the Meeting and
ending at our 2001 Annual Meeting of Stockholders. Our board of directors is not
classified.

    Our board has nominated our four current directors for re-election. Brief
biographies of the nominees, as of June 14, 2000, follow. You will find
information about their stock holdings on page 15.

<TABLE>
<S>                           <C>
KILLKO A. CABALLERO.........  Mr. Caballero has served as one of our directors since
                              November 1995 and was appointed as our Chairman in
                              January 2000. He has been our Chief Executive Officer since
                              December 1998 and our President since August 1997. He served
                              as our interim President during June and July 1997, and as
                              our Senior Vice President of Research and Development and
                              Chief Technology Officer from November 1995 until June 1997.
                              Mr. Caballero was a co-founder of White Pine Software,
                              Europe and served as President, Chief Executive Officer and
                              Chairman of the Board of White Pine Software, Europe from
                              July 1991 until November 1995. He is 40 years old.

JOSEPH J. ESPOSITO..........  Mr. Esposito has served as one of our directors since
                              January 2000. From 1997 until December 1999, he was the
                              President and Chief Executive Officer of Tribal Voice, Inc.,
                              a provider of instant messaging, interactive communications
                              and online community solutions, until it was acquired by
                              CMGI, Inc. Currently he works as a consultant for our
                              company and others, focusing on strategy for the
                              communications and information industries. Prior to joining
                              Tribal Voice, Mr. Esposito worked in the publishing
                              industry, with tenures at Simon & Schuster and Random House.
                              Mr. Esposito also served as Chief Executive Officer of
                              Encyclopaedia Britannica. He is 48 years old.

JONATHAN G. MORGAN..........  Mr. Morgan has served as one of our directors since May
                              1996. He has been a Managing Director of Prudential
                              Securities Incorporated, an investment banking firm, since
                              June 1993 and currently serves in the Prudential Volpe
                              Technology Group, a division of Prudential Securities. He is
                              46 years old.

ADAM STETTNER...............  Mr. Stettner has served as one of our directors since March
                              1999. He has been Managing Director of the Special
                              Situations Technology Fund, an investment fund, since April
                              1997 and President of Stettner Consultants, Inc., a computer
                              consulting company, since 1989. He is 36 years old.
</TABLE>

    If for any reason any of the nominees becomes unavailable for election, the
persons designated in the proxy card may vote the proxy to elect a substitute.
Each of the four nominees has consented to serve as a director if elected, and
we have no reason to believe that any of the nominees will become unavailable
for election.

    The four nominees receiving the greatest number of votes cast will be
elected as directors. We will not count abstentions or broker non-votes when we
tabulate votes cast for the election of directors.

    OUR BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE FOR THE ELECTION OF EACH OF
MESSRS. CABALLERO, ESPOSITO, MORGAN AND STETTNER.

                                       4
<PAGE>
PROPOSAL TWO: APPROVAL OF AMENDMENT OF STOCK OPTION PLAN

    Our 1996 Incentive and Nonqualified Stock Option Plan, which we refer to as
the Plan, currently provides that the total number of shares of common stock
that may be issued pursuant to options granted thereunder shall not exceed
1,000,000, subject to adjustment upon certain changes in our capitalization. Our
board proposes that the Plan be amended to increase the number of shares of
common stock that may be issued pursuant to options granted under the Plan from
1,000,000 to 2,400,000.

    All of the 1,000,000 shares of common stock covered by the Plan have been
issued upon option exercises or are the subject of currently outstanding
options. In December 1999, our board voted, subject to stockholder approval, to
amend the Plan to increase the number of shares of common stock that may be
issued pursuant to options granted thereunder from 1,000,000 to 1,600,000. In
June 2000, our board voted, subject to stockholder approval, to further amend
the Plan to increase the shares issuable thereunder from 1,600,000 to 2,400,000.
Our board's votes were based on its determination that it was desirable to have
additional shares available to cover future option grants to employees and that
increasing the number of shares available under the Plan would further align the
interests of our stockholders and management and would assist us in attracting
and retaining executives and other employees. To date, we have granted options
to new and existing employees to acquire a total of 1,066,995 of the 1,400,000
additional shares. In the event that Proposal Two is not approved, we anticipate
that the options purported to have been issued under the Plan for such 1,066,995
shares would be replaced with options that (1) would constitute nonqualified
options, as defined below, (2) would be issued under a new stock option plan,
and (3) would otherwise have terms, including exercise prices and vesting
conditions identical to the options that they are replacing.

    Stockholder approval of the amendment is required under the terms of the
Plan. Under Section 422 of the Internal Revenue Code, stockholder approval of
the amendment is necessary for stock options issued under the Plan to qualify as
incentive options, as defined below. Stockholder approval also is required to
qualify compensation received under the Plan as "performance-based compensation"
for purposes of Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code.

    If Proposal Two is approved at the Meeting, we intend to file, as soon as
practicable after the meeting, a registration statement on Form S-8 under the
Securities Act of 1933 covering the additional shares of common stock issuable
pursuant to stock options granted under the Plan, as amended.

    OUR BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE FOR APPROVAL OF THE
AMENDMENT TO OUR 1996 INCENTIVE AND NONQUALIFIED STOCK OPTION PLAN.

    SUMMARY OF THE PLAN

    As of June 14, 2000, 1,872,857 shares of common stock were subject to
outstanding options granted under the Plan and 194,138 shares had been purchased
upon exercise of options granted thereunder. If Proposal Two is adopted, a total
of 333,005 shares would be available for future grants under the Plan. As of
June 14, 2000, option prices and expiration dates for outstanding options
granted under the Plan ranged from $0.8438 to $45.375 per share and from
July 1, 2006 to June 5, 2010, respectively.

    The Plan authorizes the grant of (a) options to purchase common stock
intended to qualify as incentive stock options as defined in Section 422 of the
Code, which we refer to as incentive options and (b) options that do not so
qualify, which we refer to as nonqualified options. The exercise price of
incentive options granted under the Plan must be at least equal to the fair
market value of the common stock on the date of grant. The exercise price of
incentive options granted to an optionee who owns stock possessing more than 10%
of the voting power of our outstanding capital stock must equal at least 110% of
the fair market value of the common stock on the date of grant. The exercise
price of

                                       5
<PAGE>
nonqualified options granted under the Plan must not be less than 85% of the
fair market value of the common stock on the grant date.

    The Plan is administered by our board's Compensation Committee. The
Compensation Committee selects the individuals to whom options are granted and
determines the option exercise price and other terms of each award, subject to
the provisions of the Plan. Incentive options may be granted under the Plan to
employees, including officers and directors who are also employees. As of
June 14, 2000, 158 employees were eligible to participate in the Plan.
Nonqualified options may be granted under the Plan to employees, officers,
individuals providing services to us, and directors, whether or not they are our
employees.

    No option may extend for more than 10 years from the date of grant, and any
option granted to an optionee who owns stock possessing more than 10% of the
total combined voting power of all classes of stock of our company or any parent
or subsidiary of our company may not extend for more than five years from the
date of grant. The aggregate fair market value, determined at the time of grant,
of shares issuable pursuant to incentive options that first become exercisable
by an employee or officer in any calendar year may not exceed $100,000.

    Options are non-transferable except by will or by the laws of descent or
distribution and are exercisable, during the optionee's lifetime, only by the
optionee. Options generally may not be exercised after (a) 30 days after
termination of the optionee's employment with us other than as a result of death
or permanent or total disability, including upon the optionee's retirement, and
(b) 12 months after termination of the optionee's employment with us as a result
of the death of the optionee or the permanent and total disability of the
optionee under our then-established rules.

    Payment of the exercise price of the shares of common stock subject to the
option may be made with (a) cash, check, bank draft or money order for an amount
equal to the option price for the shares, (b) if permitted by the instrument
evidencing the option (or, in the case of a nonqualified option, with the
consent of the Compensation Committee), shares of common stock having a fair
market value equal to the option price of such shares, (c) delivery of an
unconditional and irrevocable undertaking by a broker to deliver promptly to us
sufficient funds to pay the option price, (d) if permitted by the instrument
evidencing the option (or, in the case of a nonqualified option, with the
consent of the Compensation Committee), delivery of a promissory note of the
optionee to us, payable on such terms as are specified by the Compensation
Committee, or (e) with the consent of the Compensation Committee, a combination
of the foregoing. In any event, however, a portion of the exercise price equal
to the par value of the shares being acquired must be paid other than by the
optionee's promissory note or personal check.

    The Board may modify, revise or terminate the Plan at any time and from time
to time, except that the class of persons eligible to receive options and the
aggregate number of shares issuable pursuant to the Plan may not be changed or
increased without the consent of our stockholders.

    NEW PLAN BENEFITS

    Because the grant of options under the Plan is discretionary, we are unable
to determine the dollar value and number of options that we will grant as a
result of the proposed amendment to any person, including any executive officer,
director or director-nominee, or any associate of any executive officer,
director or director-nominee. If the proposed amendment had been in effect
during 1999, it would not have affected the determination of the number of
options received by or allocated to participants in 1999.

                                       6
<PAGE>
    To date, grants of options under the Plan to our employees, officers and
directors have been:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                      OPTIONS GRANTED
                                                       ----------------------------------------------
                                                         FROM INITIAL     FROM ADDITIONAL
                                                       1,000,000 SHARES       SHARES          TOTAL
                                                       ----------------   ---------------   ---------
<S>                                                    <C>                <C>               <C>
Killko A. Caballero..................................        85,000           189,750         274,750
Christine J. Cox.....................................        70,000            82,500         152,500
David O. Bundy.......................................        75,000            49,500         124,500
John E. Kelly........................................        75,000                --          75,000
All non-employee directors as a group................        40,000            25,000          65,000
All executive officers as a group....................       305,000           321,750         626,750
All non-executive officer employees as a group.......       620,000           526,107       1,146,107
</TABLE>

    All such options were granted at the then current fair market value (as
determined by the board) and each additional option will be granted at an
exercise price equal to the fair market value of common stock (as determined by
the board) on the date of grant.

FEDERAL INCOME TAX INFORMATION WITH RESPECT TO THE PLAN

    The holder of a nonqualified option recognizes no income for federal income
tax purposes on the grant of the option. On the exercise of a nonqualified
option, the difference between the fair market value of the underlying shares of
common stock on the exercise date and the option exercise price is treated as
compensation to the holder of the option taxable as ordinary income in the year
of exercise. Such fair market value becomes the basis for the underlying shares
that will be used in computing any capital gain or loss upon disposition of such
shares.

    The holder of an incentive option recognizes no income for federal income
tax purposes on the grant of the option. Except as provided below with respect
to the alternative minimum tax, there is no tax upon exercise of an incentive
option. If the option holder does not dispose of shares acquired upon exercise
of the incentive option within two years from the date of the grant of the
incentive option or within one year after exercise of the incentive option, any
gain realized by the option holder on the subsequent sale of such shares will be
treated for federal income tax purposes as a long-term capital gain if the
shares were held for at least one year. If the option holder sells the shares
before the expiration of such periods, the difference between the lesser of the
value of the shares at the date of exercise or at the date of sale and the
exercise price of the incentive option will be treated as compensation to the
employee taxable as ordinary income and the excess gain, if any, will be treated
as capital gain. That capital gain will be long-term capital gain if the shares
were held for more than one year.

    The excess of the fair market value of the underlying shares over the
exercise price at the time of exercise of an incentive option will constitute an
item of tax preference for purposes of the alternative minimum tax. Taxpayers
who incur the alternative minimum tax will be allowed a credit that may be
carried forward indefinitely to be used as a credit against the taxpayer's
regular tax liability in a later year. The minimum tax credit cannot, however,
reduce the regular tax below the alternative minimum tax for that carryover
year.

    Generally, subject to certain limitations, we may deduct on our corporate
income tax returns, in the year in which an option holder recognizes ordinary
income upon the exercise of a nonqualified option or a disqualifying disposition
of an incentive option, an amount equal to the amount recognized by the option
holder as ordinary income upon the occurrence of such exercise or disqualifying
disposition.

    The Plan is not subject to the provisions of the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act, nor is the Plan qualified under Section 401(a) of the Internal
Revenue Code.

                                       7
<PAGE>
OTHER MATTERS

    Neither we nor our board of directors intends to propose any matters at the
Meeting other than as described in this proxy statement. Neither we nor our
board knows of any matters to be proposed by others at the Meeting.

STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS FOR 2001 ANNUAL MEETING

    A stockholder who intends to present a proposal at the 2001 Annual Meeting
of Stockholders for inclusion in our 2001 proxy statement must submit the
proposal by February 21, 2001 or, if we hold the 2001 Annual Meeting of
Stockholders more than thirty days before or after August 2, 2001, a reasonable
time before we begin to print and mail our proxy statement. In order for the
proposal to be included in the proxy statement, the stockholder submitting the
proposal must meet eligibility standards and must comply with procedures
established by the SEC, and the proposal must comply with the requirements as to
form and substance established by applicable laws and regulations. The proposal
must be mailed to our Secretary at the address set forth on page 2.

    In addition, in accordance with our by-laws, a stockholder wishing to bring
an item of business before the 2001 Annual Meeting or to nominate any person for
election to our board of directors at the 2001 Annual Meeting must deliver
proper notice of the item of business or nomination to us at our offices no
later than June 1, 2001, even if the item or nomination is not to be included in
our proxy statement. If we hold the 2001 Annual Meeting before August 2, 2001
and we give less than 70 days' notice or prior public disclosure of the date of
the meeting, then the stockholder must deliver such notice to us at our offices
no later than the tenth day after the earlier of (a) the day on which we mailed
notice of the date of the meeting and (b) the day on which we publicly disclosed
the date of the meeting. The notice must include certain specific information
regarding the proposed item of business or nominee, the stockholder making the
proposal, other stockholders known to support the proposal, their stock
ownership and their interest in the proposal.

                                       8
<PAGE>
                     ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ABOUT DIRECTORS

BOARD MEETINGS

    During 1999 our board of directors held seven meetings. During his tenure,
each of our directors attended at least 75% of the meetings held by our board
and board committees on which he served.

BOARD COMMITTEES

    Our board of directors has appointed an Audit Committee and a Compensation
Committee. Our board has not appointed a standing Nominating Committee.

    The Audit Committee reviews the results and scope of the annual audit of our
financial statements conducted by our independent auditors and our policies and
procedures with respect to our internal accounting and financial controls. The
Audit Committee also makes recommendations to our board on the engagement of our
independent auditors, as well as other matters referred by our board. The Audit
Committee met twice in 1999. During 1999, the Audit Committee consisted of
Arthur Bruno and Adam Stettner, each of whom attended the meetings of the Audit
Committee held in 1999. Mr. Bruno, our former chairman, resigned from the Board
and all its committees in January 2000. Since that time, the Audit Committee has
consisted of Jonathan Morgan and Adam Stettner.

    The Compensation Committee provides recommendations concerning salaries,
incentives and other compensation for our directors, officers, employees and
consultants. The Compensation Committee also administers our stock option plans
and our employee stock purchase plan. During 1999 the Compensation Committee met
once and acted by unanimous written consent 22 times. During 1999, the
Compensation Committee consisted of Arthur Bruno and Jonathan Morgan, each of
whom attended each of the meetings of the Compensation Committee held in 1999.
Since Mr. Bruno's resignation in January 2000, the Compensation Committee has
consisted of Joseph Esposito and Jonathan Morgan.

DIRECTOR COMPENSATION

    We do not pay fees to our directors, and we presently have no plans to pay
directors' fees. We grant stock options to our non-employee directors pursuant
to our Director Stock Option Plan. The purpose of the Director Stock Option Plan
is to encourage ownership of common stock by our non-employee directors in order
to help us attract and retain directors of exceptional competence and to furnish
an added incentive for non-employee directors to increase their efforts on our
behalf. Joseph Esposito, Jonathan Morgan and Adam Stettner are non-employee
directors for purposes of the Director Stock Option Plan.

    Under the terms of the Director Stock Option Plan, we grant automatic
formula stock options to non-employee directors as follows:

    - upon a non-employee director's initial election, he or she is entitled to
      receive a stock option to purchase 15,000 shares of common stock; and

    - upon a non-employee director's re-election, he or she is entitled to
      receive a stock option to purchase 10,000 shares of common stock, as long
      as he or she has served as a non-employee director for at least the three
      months immediately preceding the meeting at which he or she is re-elected.

The exercise price of the options granted under the Director Stock Option Plan
must equal the fair market value of our common stock on the grant date. Each
option granted under the Director Stock Option Plan is subject to vesting under
the terms of such plan and expires upon the earlier of (a) the tenth anniversary
of the grant date and (b) the first anniversary of the date on which the option
holder ceased serving as a non-employee director.

                                       9
<PAGE>
    Pursuant to the Director Stock Option Plan, Mr. Stettner and Mr. Esposito
each received an option to purchase 15,000 shares of common stock upon election
to our board in March 1999 and January 2000, respectively.

    Pursuant to the Director Stock Option Plan, each of Messrs. Morgan and
Stettner received, upon re-election to our board in July 1999, an option to
purchase 10,000 shares of common stock at a price of $6.9375 per share, which
represented the closing price of the common stock on such date.

    In addition, on April 24, 2000, our board voted to grant to Mr. Esposito
options to purchase 25,000 shares of common stock at an exercise price of
$14.625 per share, which represented the market value on the date of grant. This
option was issued under the 1996 Incentive and Nonqualified Stock Option Plan.
It vests over a one year period.

                                       10
<PAGE>
                      INFORMATION ABOUT EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

BACKGROUND INFORMATION ABOUT EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

    Brief biographies of our executive officers, as of June 14, 1999, follow.
You will find information about their holdings of common stock on page 15.

<TABLE>
<S>                                            <C>
KILLKO A. CABALLERO..........................  You will find background information about
  CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER, PRESIDENT AND       Mr. Caballero on page 4.
  CHAIRMAN

CHRISTINE J. COX.............................  Ms. Cox has been our Vice President of
  CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER, VICE PRESIDENT OF   Finance since August 1997, our Chief
  FINANCE, TREASURER AND ASSISTANT SECRETARY   Financial Officer since December 1998, and
                                               our Treasurer and Assistant Secretary since
                                               May 2000. She was our Corporate Controller
                                               from October 1996 to August 1997. Ms. Cox
                                               served as Division Controller and Treasurer
                                               of Sequoia Systems, Inc., a fault-tolerant
                                               and business-critical microcomputer company,
                                               from May 1996 to October 1996, served as
                                               Operations Controller of Sequoia from June
                                               1995 to May 1996, and held other financial
                                               management positions at Sequoia from August
                                               1993 to June 1995.

DAVID O. BUNDY...............................  Mr. Bundy has been our Chief Technology
  CHIEF TECHNOLOGY OFFICER                     Officer since July 1998. He was our Vice
                                               President of Engineering from January 1994 to
                                               July 1998 and our Vice President and
                                               Principal Engineer from September 1991 to
                                               December 1993.

JOHN E. KELLY................................  Mr. Kelly has been our Vice President of
  VICE PRESIDENT OF WORLDWIDE SALES AND        Worldwide Sales and Marketing since March
  MARKETING                                    1999. He founded Aura Networks, a developer
                                               of datacentric digital Worldwide Sales loop
                                               carrier products, in May 1997 and was
                                               President of Aura from May 1997 until
                                               November 1998. From 1993 to April 1997, Mr.
                                               Kelly was Vice President of Marketing at
                                               Intraplex, Incorporated, a developer of
                                               digital network products for broadcast and
                                               wireless communications, which was acquired
                                               by Harris Corporation in November 1998.
</TABLE>

                                       11
<PAGE>
EXECUTIVE OFFICER COMPENSATION

    SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE FOR 1997, 1998 AND 1999

    The following table summarizes certain information with respect to the
annual and long-term compensation that we paid for the past three fiscal years
to the following persons (the "Named Officers"):

    - Killko A. Caballero, our only chief executive officer in 1999; and

    - David O. Bundy, Christine J. Cox and John E. Kelly, our other three
      executive officers whose compensation for services rendered in all
      capacities to us exceeded $100,000 during 1999.

    All of the options described in the following table have a maximum term of
ten years, subject to earlier termination in the event of the optionee's
cessation of service with us. The options are exercisable during the optionee's
lifetime only by the optionee. They are exercisable by the optionee only while
the optionee is one of our employees or advisors and for limited periods of time
after termination of employment.

                           SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                             LONG-TERM
                                                                            COMPENSATION
                                                                            ------------
                                                                               AWARDS
                                                            ANNUAL          ------------
                                                         COMPENSATION        SECURITIES
                                                     --------------------    UNDERLYING       ALL OTHER
NAME AND PRINCIPAL POSITION                 YEAR     SALARY($)   BONUS($)    OPTIONS(#)    COMPENSATION($)
---------------------------               --------   ---------   --------   ------------   ---------------
<S>                                       <C>        <C>         <C>        <C>            <C>
Killko A. Caballero.....................    1999     $155,140    $45,000       115,000              --
  Chief Executive Officer, President and    1998      150,445         --        35,000              --
  Chairman                                  1997      124,347     20,000        50,000              --

Christine J. Cox........................    1999      112,470     20,000        66,000              --
  Chief Financial Officer, Vice             1998      105,467         --        20,000              --
  President of Finance, Treasurer and       1997       83,384     15,000        37,000              --
  Assistant Secretary

David O. Bundy..........................    1999      128,546     25,000        30,000              --
  Chief Technology Officer                  1998      132,405         --        20,000         $20,000
                                            1997      119,909     15,000        60,000              --

John F. Kelly...........................    1999      140,905         --        75,000              --
  Vice President of Worldwide Sales and
  Marketing
</TABLE>

    The other compensation paid to Mr. Bundy in 1998 consisted of amounts paid
in connection with his relocation, at our request, to New Hampshire. Mr. Kelly
joined our Company in March 1999. His salary in 1999 included commissions paid
to him in 1999.

                                       12
<PAGE>
    OPTION GRANTS IN 1999

    The following table summarizes (a) option grants to the Named Officers
during 1999 and (b) the value of options held by the Named Officers at
December 31, 1999. The amounts shown in the last two columns represent
hypothetical gains that could be achieved for the respective options if
exercised at the end of their option terms. These gains are based on assumed
rates of stock appreciation of five percent and ten percent, compounded annually
from the date the respective options were granted to the date of their
expiration. The gains shown are net of the option price, but do not include
deductions for taxes or other expenses that may be associated with the exercise.
Actual gains, if any, on stock option exercises will depend on the future
performance of our common stock, the option holders' continued employment
through the option term, and the date on which the options are exercised.

                       OPTION GRANTS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                    INDIVIDUAL GRANTS                       POTENTIAL REALIZABLE
                                 -------------------------------------------------------      VALUE AT ASSUMED
                                               PERCENT OF                                       ANNUAL RATES
                                 NUMBER OF       TOTAL                                         OF STOCK PRICE
                                 SECURITIES     OPTIONS                                       APPRECIATION FOR
                                 UNDERLYING    GRANTED TO     EXERCISE OR                        OPTION TERM
                                  OPTIONS     EMPLOYEES IN   BASE PRICE PER   EXPIRATION   -----------------------
NAME                             GRANTED(#)   FISCAL YEAR     SHARE($/SH)        DATE        5%($)        10%($)
----                             ----------   ------------   --------------   ----------   ----------   ----------
<S>                              <C>          <C>            <C>              <C>          <C>          <C>
Killko A. Caballero............   115,000          13%          $25.375        12/17/09    $1,835,193   $4,650,740
Christine J. Cox...............    50,000           6            25.375        12/17/09       797,910    2,022,061
                                   16,000           2             6.625         7/23/09        66,663      168,937
David O. Bundy.................    30,000           3            25.375        12/17/09       478,746    1,213,236
John E. Kelly..................    75,000           8            2.8125         3/15/09       132,657      336,180
</TABLE>

    AGGREGATED OPTION EXERCISES IN 1999 AND OPTION VALUES AT DECEMBER 31, 1999

    The following table summarizes information about options exercised during
1999, and the value of unexercised options held at the end of 1999, by the Named
Officers. The closing sale price for our common stock as reported on the Nasdaq
National Market on December 31, 1999 was $24.50. For purposes of the last column
in the table, value is calculated on the basis of the difference between the
option exercise price and $24.50, multiplied by the number of shares of common
stock underlying the options.

                AGGREGATED OPTION EXERCISES IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
                       AND FISCAL YEAR-END OPTION VALUES

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                NUMBER OF               VALUE OF UNEXERCISED
                             SHARES                        UNEXERCISED OPTIONS         IN-THE-MONEY OPTIONS AT
                            ACQUIRED                      AT FISCAL YEAR-END(#)          FISCAL YEAR-END($)
                               ON           VALUE      ---------------------------   ---------------------------
NAME                       EXERCISE(#)   REALIZED($)   EXERCISABLE   UNEXERCISABLE   EXERCISABLE   UNEXERCISABLE
----                       -----------   -----------   -----------   -------------   -----------   -------------
<S>                        <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>             <C>           <C>
Killko A. Caballero......         --            --       33,750         166,250      $  747,969     $1,143,906
Christine J. Cox.........         --            --       23,875          96,125         528,375        958,125
David O. Bundy...........     35,000      $405,000       45,625          69,375       1,006,875        875,625
John E. Kelly............         --            --        9,375          65,625         203,320      1,423,242
</TABLE>

                                       13
<PAGE>
RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS

    We entered into a nondisclosure and noncompetition agreement with David O.
Bundy dated February 15, 1996. Pursuant to the agreement, Mr. Bundy agreed that
while employed by us and for a period of 19 months following the termination of
his employment with us for any reason, he will not, directly or indirectly,
compete with us or solicit any of our employees, contractors, suppliers,
existing customers or prospective customers on behalf of himself or any other
entity that engages in the sale, distribution or development of or research
concerning computer software and technology in breach of the agreement. Either
party may terminate the agreement by giving the other party thirty days' prior
written notice. If Mr. Bundy's employment is terminated without cause during the
term of the agreement, he will be entitled to his base salary for six months or
until he becomes employed elsewhere, whichever occurs first; provided, however,
that if his new salary is lower than his base salary at our company, we will pay
the difference for the balance of this six-month period.

    We entered into a letter agreement dated August 5, 1997 with Christine J.
Cox with respect to her employment as our Vice President of Finance. The letter
agreement establishes a base salary of $100,000 per year and provides for a
maximum annual incentive bonus of $15,000, based upon achievement of specific
milestones to be established by us. If Ms. Cox's employment is terminated
without cause during the term of the agreement, she will be entitled to her base
salary for six months. The letter agreement does not provide for any minimum
period of employment, and therefore Ms. Cox continues to be an at-will employee.

    In December 1999, we sold 78,125 shares of common stock to Special
Situations Private Equity Fund, L.P., 65,104 shares of common stock to Special
Situations Cayman Fund, L.P., and 182,292 shares of common stock to Special
Situations Fund III, L.P., at a price of $15.36 per share. Under SEC
regulations, these funds may be deemed to be affiliated with Austin W. Marxe and
David Greenhouse, who beneficially owned 9.1% of our common stock as of
June 14, 2000, and Adam Stettner, one of our directors. The shares sold to these
funds were sold on terms identical to the terms under which we sold an
additional 976,563 shares of common stock to third parties in December 1999.

                                       14
<PAGE>
                       INFORMATION ABOUT STOCK OWNERSHIP

STOCK OWNED BY DIRECTORS, EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND GREATER-THAN-5% STOCKHOLDERS

    The following table sets forth certain information with respect to the
beneficial ownership of common stock as of June 14, 2000, by (a) each person (or
group of affiliated persons) known by us to own beneficially more than five
percent of the outstanding shares of common stock, (b) each of our directors,
(c) each of the Named Officers and (d) all of our directors and executive
officers as a group. Unless otherwise noted:

    - The address of all persons who are executive officers or directors is in
      care of CUseeMe Networks, Inc., 542 Amherst Street, Nashua, New Hampshire
      03063.

    - Each person or group identified in the table possesses sole voting and
      investment power with respect to such shares, subject to community
      property laws, where applicable. Shares not outstanding but deemed
      beneficially owned by virtue of the right of a person or group to acquire
      them within 60 days of June 14, 2000 are treated as outstanding only for
      purposes of determining the amount and percentages beneficially owned by
      such person or group.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                 SHARES        PERCENT
                                                              BENEFICIALLY   BENEFICIALLY
NAME AND ADDRESS                                                 OWNED          OWNED
----------------                                              ------------   ------------
<S>                                                           <C>            <C>
Austin W. Marxe and David Greenhouse........................   1,108,421         9.1 %
  153 East 53 Street, 51st Floor
  New York, New York 10022

Adam Stettner...............................................   1,133,421         9.3
  153 East 53 Street, 51st Floor
  New York, New York 10022

Consortium de Realisation...................................     820,330         6.7
  27-29 rue Le Peletier
  75009 Paris, France

Killko A. Caballero.........................................     411,075         3.4

David O. Bundy..............................................      73,206         *

Joseph J. Esposito..........................................       6,250         *

Jonathan G. Morgan..........................................      57,708         *

Christine J. Cox............................................      40,548         *

John E. Kelly...............................................      22,750         *

All directors and executive officers as a group (seven         1,744,958        14.3
  persons)..................................................
</TABLE>

------------------------

*   Represents less than 1% of the outstanding shares of common stock.

    The information reported regarding Messrs. Marxe and Greenhouse is based on
Amendment No. 2 to Schedule 13G, filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission on March 2, 2000 by Special Situations Fund III, L.P., MGP Advisers
Limited Partnership, Special Situations Technology Fund, L.P., SST Advisers,
L.L.C., Special Situations Cayman Fund, L.P., AWM Investment Company, Inc.,
Special Situations Private Equity Fund, L.P., MG Advisors L.L.C., Austin W.
Marxe and David Greenhouse. Of the 1,108,421 shares, (a) 665,192 shares are
beneficially owned by Special Situations Fund III, L.P. and MGP Advisers Limited
Partnership (the general partner of and investment advisor to Special Situations
Fund III, L.P.), (b) 143,600 shares are beneficially owned by Special Situations
Technology Fund, L.P. and SST Advisers, L.L.C. (the general partner of and
investment advisor to Special Situations Technology Fund, L.P.), (c) 221,504
shares are beneficially owned by Special Situations Cayman Fund,

                                       15
<PAGE>
L.P. and AWM Investment Company Inc. (the general partner of and investment
advisor to Special Situations Cayman Fund, L.P.), and (d) 78,125 shares are
beneficially owned by Special Situations Private Equity Fund, L.P., and MG
Advisors, L.L.C. Messrs. Marxe and Greenhouse, who serve as officers, directors
and members or principal shareholders of the four investment advisers, claim
sole voting and dispositive powers for all of the 1,108,421 shares.

    Of the 1,133,421 shares deemed to be beneficially owned by Mr. Stettner,
1,108,421 consist of the shares described in the preceding paragraph. Mr.
Stettner is an employee of an entity controlled by Messrs. Marxe and Greenhouse.
Mr. Stettner disclaims ownership of all of these shares, other than the 143,600
shares owned by Special Situations Technology Fund, L.P., of which he is the
managing director.

    The information reported regarding the Consortium de Realisation is based on
a Schedule 13G filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on October 2,
1997 by Consortium de Realisation, CDR Enterprises and Land Free Investment. All
of the 820,330 shares are directly owned by Land Free Investment, which is a
direct subsidiary of CDR Enterprises and an indirect subsidiary of Consortium de
Realisation. All of the reporting parties claim shared voting and dispositive
powers for all of the 820,330 shares.

    The information reported regarding the directors and executive officers
includes options, exercisable by the following, within 60 days of June 14, 2000,
to purchase the indicated numbers of shares of common stock:

<TABLE>
<S>                                                           <C>
Adam Stettner...............................................  25,000
Killko A. Caballero.........................................  58,751
Joseph J. Esposito..........................................   6,250
David O. Bundy..............................................  57,501
Jonathan G. Morgan..........................................  57,708
Christine J. Cox............................................  38,001
John E. Kelly...............................................      --
</TABLE>

COMPLIANCE WITH REPORTING REQUIREMENTS

    Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 requires our directors
and executive officers, and persons who own more than ten percent of our common
stock, to file with the Securities and Exchange Commission reports of ownership
on Form 3 and reports of changes in ownership on Forms 4 and 5. These directors,
executive officers and ten-percent stockholders must furnish us with copies of
all Section 16(a) reports they file. Based solely on our review of the copies of
the forms furnished to us, we believe that all Section 16(a) reports applicable
to our directors, executive officers and ten-percent stockholders with respect
to reportable transactions during 1999 were filed on a timely basis. Each of
David O. Bundy, Killko A. Caballero, Christine J. Cox and Jonathan G. Morgan
filed on August 21, 1999 a Form 5 due on February 14, 1999; these Forms 5
applied to transactions during 1998.

                                       16
<PAGE>


                            CUSEEME NETWORKS, INC.

               PROXY SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
                     FOR 2000 ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

     The undersigned, revoking all prior proxies, hereby authorizes and appoints
Killko A. Caballero and Christine J. Cox, and each them, as proxies with full
power of substitution in each, to vote all shares of common stock, par value
$.01 per share, of CUseeMe Networks, Inc. held of record by the undersigned
as of the close of business on June 14, 2000, at the 2000 Annual Meeting of
Stockholders to be held at 10:00 A.M. on Wednesday, August 2, 2000 at the
Crowne Plaza-Trafalgar Square Suite, 2 Somerset Parkway, Nashua, New
Hampshire 03063-1036, and at any adjournments thereof, on all matters that may
properly come before said meeting.

     THIS PROXY WHEN PROPERLY EXECUTED WILL BE VOTED AS DIRECTED ON THE REVERSE
OR, IN THE ABSENCE OF SUCH DIRECTION, WILL BE VOTED FOR EACH PROPOSAL LISTED ON
THE REVERSE. UPON OTHER MATTERS THAT MAY PROPERLY COME BEFORE THE MEETING OR ANY
ADJOURNMENTS THEREOF, THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE JUDGMENT
OF THE PROXIES.

                         (TO BE SIGNED ON REVERSE SIDE)


<PAGE>


/X/ Please mark your votes as in this example.

<TABLE>

<S>                  <C>                                  <C>

PROPOSAL ONE:        Election of four directors

    NOMINEES:        JOSEPH J. ESPOSITO                      KILLKO A. CABALLERO
                     JONATHAN G. MORGAN                      ADAM STETTNER

    / / FOR all of the nominees listed above             / / WITHHOLD AUTHORITY to vote
                                                              for the nominees listed above
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
     <S>              <C>

     INSTRUCTIONS:    To withhold authority to vote for one or more nominees, write his name or their
                      names on the lines below:

                      -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                      -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

</TABLE>


                THE DIRECTORS RECOMMEND A VOTE FOR EACH NOMINEE.


PROPOSAL TWO: Approval of the amendments to the CUseeMe Networks, Inc.
              (formerly known as, White Pine Software, Inc.) 1996 Incentive
              and Nonqualified Stock Option Plan in order to increase the
              aggregate number of Shares of Common Stock available for grant
              thereunder from 1,000,000 to 2,400,000.

  / / FOR                        / / AGAINST                      / / ABSTAIN


               THE DIRECTORS RECOMMEND A VOTE FOR APPROVAL OF THE
               AMENDMENT TO THE CUSEEME NETWORKS, INC. (FORMERLY KNOWN AS, WHITE
               PINE SOFTWARE, INC.) 1996 INCENTIVE AND NONQUALIFIED STOCK OPTION
               PLAN.


PLEASE SIGN, DATE AND RETURN THIS PROXY PROMPTLY USING THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE,
WHICH REQUIRES NO POSTAGE IF MAILED IN THE UNITED STATES.

<TABLE>

<S>                                     <C>

Signature:                              Signature:
          ----------------------------            ----------------------------
                                        (IF HELD JOINTLY)

Dated:                        , 2000    Dated:                        , 2000
          --------------------                    --------------------

</TABLE>

NOTE: This Proxy Card must be signed exactly as the name of the stockholder(s)
      appears on the label above. Executors, administrators, trustees, etc.
      should give full title as such. If the signatory is a corporation, please
      sign full corporate name by duly authorized officer.




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