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CyberSoft Operating Corporation was founded in 1988 and is best known for the VFind Security ToolKit Family (VSTK), a security, antivirus, and anti-malware toolkit for Linux and UNIX servers. The material highlights its early UNIX antivirus capabilities and its long-standing use by government, defense, research, and large enterprise customers, making it suitable for protecting mission-critical systems.
VSTK is not a single-console product, but a set of modular tools. VFind handles virus and pattern scanning, while the VDL virus description language lets users define custom scanning logic. CIT uses modern cryptographic hash algorithms for file integrity and event monitoring, and can report file creation, deletion, modification, or duplication. Avatar provides self-healing and system baseline verification. UAD can recursively unpack files, making it useful for scanning email attachments and compound files. Supported platforms include Linux, Solaris, HPUX, AIX, and FreeBSD, and CyberSoft says it can be ported to other UNIX systems on request. Deployment is primarily local and command-line oriented: it can be installed via an install script and automated with cron, daemons, standard input/output, and SmartScan.
The product is managed more like a system administrator’s toolkit. CIT generates text reports that are easy to read and parse. VFind can output scan results and can also be combined with UNIX tools such as mail and grep to send notifications. Virus definitions support automatic updates, and the material states that VDL is updated at least four times per week. Integration options are relatively strong, with explicit mentions of AMaViS, sendmail/libmilter, Bourne shell scripts, a direct sendmail interface, and, in some versions, Network Traffic Intercepter, which can scan mail, HTTP, FTP, Telnet, and other port traffic. However, NTI is not supported on all systems.
Pricing is not publicly listed. The site only states that trial licenses last 30 days, and that upgrades and certain components require contacting CyberSoft for pricing. Technical support is available Monday to Friday, 8:00–17:00, and the company also offers integration troubleshooting, forensic assistance, and consulting services. The material includes many customer testimonials, but lacks information on SLAs, response tiers, compliance certifications, and payment methods.
Its strengths are a clear focus on UNIX/Linux, broad platform coverage, modularity, scriptability, and deep integration options. It is well suited to experienced administrators and mission-critical environments. The drawbacks are that the product format feels traditional, with no described centralized visual management, cloud console, or EDR/XDR-style capabilities; pricing and compliance information are also opaque. It is a better fit for government, defense, research, finance, or enterprises that still run large UNIX estates, rather than small and midsize teams looking for an out-of-the-box SaaS console.
The material does not provide information about network accessibility from China, RMB payments, local partners, or Chinese-language support, so China access is unknown. For domestic deployment in China, it is advisable to first verify connectivity to the official website, update servers, and license activation services. Alternatives to consider include ClamAV, Sophos, ESET, Trend Micro, or Trellix Linux/server security products.
⚠ 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 cyber.com official site.
cyber.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 Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach cyber.com directly.