Disclaimer

Disclaimer

A short, plain-language note on how to read the content on this site, what we mean (and don't mean) by it, and what governs our actual work.

Last updated: 2026-05-04

1. General information, not professional advice

The content on cyberguards.ai — including service pages, industry pages, blog posts, and resources — is for general informational purposes. It reflects our experience and editorial judgement at the time of writing. It is not legal advice, regulatory advice, audit opinion, or a substitute for engaging a qualified professional for your specific situation.

If you need advice on a specific compliance question (SOC 2 readiness, ISO 27001 certification, PCI DSS scope, HIPAA Security Rule applicability, FedRAMP authorization), consult a licensed attorney, CPA, QSA, or accredited assessor as appropriate.

2. Engagements are governed by signed agreements

Descriptions of our penetration-testing services on this Site — including what we test, how engagements are scoped, deliverables, timing, retest, and pricing ranges — are descriptions of how we generally work. They are not by themselves a binding offer to perform any particular work for any particular customer.

The actual scope, price, deliverables, schedule, and other terms of any engagement are set out in a written engagement agreement signed by both parties. In the event of any conflict between the content on this Site and a signed engagement agreement, the engagement agreement controls.

3. Forward-looking and predictive content

Some of our content discusses where industry standards (e.g., OWASP Top 10 revisions), regulations (e.g., AI Act, NIST AI RMF), or attack patterns may evolve. These discussions are based on the public process visible at the time of writing and on our experience. They are not predictions, guarantees, or commitments. The final form of any standard, regulation, or pattern is determined by the bodies and adversaries responsible for it, not by us.

Where we cite specific standards or framework versions, we name the version at time of writing and update articles when material revisions are published.

4. Third-party content and links

This Site may link to or reference third-party content — standards bodies (OWASP, NIST, ISO, MITRE, PCI SSC), regulators, vendors, news outlets, and security researchers. We do not control third-party content and do not endorse it beyond the specific point we are linking to. Links may break or change without our knowledge; we update them as we find issues.

5. Examples and patterns are synthesized

Where we discuss "common findings", "real engagements", or "patterns we see", we synthesize across many engagements without identifying any specific customer. We do not disclose customer-specific information without explicit written authorization. References to industry incidents are based on publicly reported information.

6. No warranty of accuracy or fitness for purpose

We take reasonable care to ensure content on the Site is accurate and useful. We do not warrant that it is complete, current, or fit for any particular purpose. To the fullest extent permitted by law, we disclaim all warranties, express or implied, in connection with the content on this Site.

Our disclaimers under signed engagement agreements are governed by the terms of those agreements, not by this section.

7. Limitation of liability

To the fullest extent permitted by law, CyberGuards is not liable for any decision made or action taken in reliance on the content on this Site. If you act on something you read here, you do so at your own risk and judgement.

8. Changes to this disclaimer

We update this page when our practices or applicable law changes. The "Last updated" date at the top reflects the most recent revision.

9. Contact

Want a credible answer to: are we secure?

A 30-minute review with our lead pentester. No slides, no pitch — we look at what you have, tell you what we would test first, and give you a fair scope and timeline.