Let me tell you something real: I didn’t lose money to CYBR International because I’m dumb. I lost it because I was lonely, tired, and trusting — and they knew exactly how to use that against me.
Stage 1: They Find You When You’re Soft
Not when you’re scrolling crypto charts. When you’re scrolling through life wondering why no one texts back. When your last relationship ended badly. When you’re working two jobs and still can’t catch up. That’s when the DM arrives — warm, attentive, curious. Not ‘Hey invest with me.’ Just: ‘You seem really thoughtful. What keeps you up at night?’
Stage 2: The Slow Burn of Fake Intimacy
They remember your dog’s name. Ask about your mom’s surgery. Send voice notes at 2 a.m. saying, ‘I just thought of you while reading about data privacy.’ And yeah — CYBR International *is* real on paper. ‘Sovereign internet.’ ‘End-to-end encrypted cloud.’ Sounds like something Edward Snowden would endorse. But here’s the truth: they don’t care about cybersecurity. They care about your bank balance — and your heart.
Stage 3: The Bait Is Never the Return — It’s the Relationship
No aggressive pitch. No ‘URGENT! LIMITED SPOTS!’ Just: ‘I’ve been using CYBR International for six months — it’s how I finally got out of credit card debt.’ Then comes the screenshot. $4,827 profit in 11 days. Clean UI. Green arrows. Looks legit — because it’s fake, generated, and designed to trigger your dopamine *and* your shame (‘Why am I not doing this?’).
You deposit $250. Sure enough — $312 shows up in your dashboard 48 hours later. You withdraw it. It clears. That’s the trap. That tiny win isn’t proof it works. It’s proof you’ll trust them with more.
Stage 4: The Math That Screams ‘Ponzi’
Now they ask for $5,000. ‘The minimum for the Sovereign Tier is $4,999 — but I’ll cover the $1 processing fee.’ Sounds generous. Let’s do the math they *won’t* show you:
If CYBR International truly delivered even half the returns their ‘ambassadors’ claim — say, 1.2% daily — that’s 438% per year. Compound that: $5,000 becomes $26,900 in one year. In two years? $145,000. In three? Over $780,000.
No legitimate cybersecurity company — let alone one with zero audited revenue, no SEC filings, no verifiable clients — generates returns like that. Not even hedge funds with billion-dollar war chests do that. This isn’t investing. It’s arithmetic theater — designed to make you ignore your gut.

As Benjamin Graham warned: ‘The investor’s chief problem — and even his worst enemy — is likely to be himself.’ Not the platform. Not the market. You, believing the person who says ‘I love how intentional you are’ — right before asking you to wire money to an unregistered Cayman Islands shell company named ‘CYBR Nexus Holdings Ltd.’
When you try to withdraw your $5,000 + ‘profits,’ you get the first fee: ‘KYC verification upgrade: $399.’ Pay it? Next message: ‘Regulatory compliance lock: $749 to release tier-2 liquidity.’ Pay again? Silence. Or worse — a new voice note: ‘I’m so sorry, babe. My uncle handles the backend… he’s in the hospital.’
That’s not a glitch. That’s the business model.
CYBR International doesn’t sell software. It sells hope — wrapped in affection, disguised as innovation, and priced in your life savings.
Real cybersecurity companies have whitepapers, penetration test reports, and customers who will answer press calls. CYBR International has Telegram admins who change profile pictures every Tuesday and a ‘CEO’ whose LinkedIn was created three weeks ago — with zero prior work history.
If someone you ‘met online’ wants you to invest — especially in something vague-sounding like ‘sovereign internet infrastructure’ — walk away. Not slowly. Run. Because love shouldn’t come with a deposit button. And real security doesn’t start with a DM.
You deserve both safety and sincerity. Not a scam dressed up as salvation.
Expose scammer



















