Updated on Mar 17, 2026

Affiliate Disclosure

How affiliate links fund this site without compromising our editorial independence.

Running a cybersecurity review site costs money. Hosting, test environments, endpoint licenses, the occasional vulnerability scanner subscription that turns out to be spectacularly underwhelming. We fund Cybersec Manager through affiliate programmes, which means we may earn a commission when you click through our links and purchase a product we have reviewed. This page exists because you deserve to know how that works.

When we link to a security product, that link often contains a tracking code. If you click through and eventually subscribe, the vendor pays us a small commission. The price you pay remains exactly the same; the commission comes from the vendor’s marketing budget, not your budget. We participate in multiple affiliate programmes across the endpoint protection, vulnerability management, and password manager space.

Editorial Independence

Affiliate relationships do not influence our reviews. We do not accept payment for rankings, and we do not adjust our assessments based on commission rates. When an EDR platform disappoints in real-world detection tests, we say so. When pricing structures punish growth or support quality declines after an acquisition, we document it. A positive review that sends you toward an endpoint protection suite that cannot handle your threat landscape would undermine the only thing that makes this enterprise worthwhile, and in cybersecurity, bad recommendations have consequences that go well beyond wasted budget.

FTC Compliance

In accordance with Federal Trade Commission guidelines, we disclose that Cybersec Manager receives compensation through affiliate partnerships. Our recommendations reflect genuine assessment, not commercial arrangements.

Questions about our affiliate relationships? Reach us at [email protected]