Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Sub-Q-Tek (Sub Quantum Technologies) is an IT asset disposition (ITAD) service provider based in Norman, Oklahoma, USA. It serves enterprises retiring IT equipment, offering secure pickup, asset tracking, data destruction, refurbishment, resale, and profit sharing. Rather than positioning itself as a traditional “rapid destruction” recycler, it emphasizes “Repair Before Recycle,” meaning it prioritizes testing, repair, grading, and reuse, increasing recovery value through secondary-market sales whenever feasible.
From a cybersecurity perspective, its core protection focus is the secure handling of data-bearing devices. The website describes unique serial-number tagging, chain of custody, pre-audit upon receipt, isolation of data devices, access-controlled storage areas, certified data destruction, audit reports, and data destruction certificates, stating that reports are uploaded to a customer portal. On compliance, the site mentions the R2v3 standard, NIST 800-88, SOC 2 security principles, and ISO-aligned governance, as well as role-based access control, change management, and audited information security processes. However, no certificate numbers, audit organizations, or public verification links were found, so these should be treated as claim-based information.
Its pricing model is consignment-based: the website states there are no upfront costs and no hidden processing fees, with operating and service costs deducted from the profits generated by refurbished asset sales, and the customer’s share of profits returned monthly. This can be appealing to enterprises looking to reduce disposal budgets while recovering residual asset value. However, the site does not disclose the revenue-sharing ratio, cost breakdown, minimum asset volume, fees for non-refurbishable assets, or logistics boundaries, so these still need to be confirmed contractually before procurement.
Its strengths are a comprehensive workflow that balances security, sustainability, and asset returns. Compared with simple shredding or recycling models, its refurbishment-first approach better aligns with environmental and financial goals. Chain-of-custody tracking, destruction certificates, and a customer portal also support audit trails. The limitations are that service regions and SLAs are unclear, technical details on data destruction are limited, compliance credentials lack verifiable materials, and there is no disclosed API or integration capability with enterprise ITAM or ticketing systems.
It is better suited to U.S.-based companies, especially those within its acceptable logistics coverage, for bulk disposition of laptops, servers, network equipment, and peripherals, while aiming to recover as much asset value as possible after securely destroying data. It is less suitable for customers that need purely software-based data loss prevention, real-time security alerts, or a standardized multinational ITAD network.
Website accessibility cannot be determined from the source text, so it is marked as unknown. Even if accessible, its business is essentially an offline U.S. ITAD service. Chinese companies considering it should carefully verify cross-border logistics, data export implications, compliance responsibilities, and the feasibility of local disposition.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on subqtek.com official site.
subqtek.com is an United States Security provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach subqtek.com directly.