Cyber Wurx
About Cyber Wurx
headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia. The company says it was founded in 1997 and positions itself around premium colocation, bare metal servers, virtual private servers, networking, and data center services for customers ranging from small businesses to enterprise organizations. Its public materials consistently center the business on owned and operated Atlanta facilities, with colocation and dedicated infrastructure as the strongest clearly documented offerings. Recent website content also supports managed services for dedicated servers and colocated environments, while older official posts show the company has promoted private cloud hosting use cases in its Atlanta data center.
⚙️ Facility Highlights
Data Center Footprint:
Cyber Wurx publicly documents an Atlanta footprint. Its main data center page states that its 20,000 square foot colocation facility is located at 55 Marietta Street in downtown Atlanta’s internet exchange district, and its contact page lists the mailing and data center address as 55 Marietta Street, Suite 1600, Atlanta, Georgia 30303. Public site language refers to facilities in Atlanta, but the clearly identified customer facing facility in the reviewed sources is the 55 Marietta location.
The company positions this location around Atlanta’s fiber infrastructure and reliable power grid, and it markets the site as suitable for customers ranging from 2U deployments to private cages. Cyber Wurx also emphasizes access to the 55 and 56 Marietta telco hotel ecosystem, which supports a downtown Atlanta interconnection oriented profile.
Facility Design & Infrastructure:
Cyber Wurx publishes meaningful facility detail. Its data center page lists 2 MW power capacity, multiple service feeds from major Metro Atlanta power grids, more than 100 kVA UPS capacity availability, generator backup, A+B power redundancy options, 120v and 208v power, surge protection, and regular preventative maintenance.
Its colocation page adds full UPS power with generator backup, N+1 climate control, fire suppression, 24/7 NOC support, 24/7 multi layered security, free KVM or console access in some cases, and deployment options from 2U to private cages. The bandwidth page also describes a fully staffed facility with a redundant multi homed BGP network.
Service Portfolio Overview:
Cyber Wurx clearly publishes colocation, dedicated servers, virtual private servers, networking, and data center solutions. Its About page explicitly names virtual private servers, bare metal servers, industrial colocation, networking, and data center solutions, while the main site highlights colocation and dedicated server offers.
Managed services are also clearly supported. Cyber Wurx has a dedicated managed services page describing support for VPS and dedicated server customers, including hardware support, OS security updates, monitoring, intrusion detection, and restoration from backups after hardware failure. Managed dedicated server pages also describe bare metal Intel hardware administered by Cyber Wurx staff.
🔐 Security & Compliance
Infrastructure Resilience:
Cyber Wurx’s reviewed materials support a resilience oriented profile through UPS backed power, generator backup, A+B redundancy options, multiple metro power feeds, and N+1 climate control. The colocation page also describes a redundant multi homed BGP network, while dedicated server pages describe fully redundant network and power systems.
The company’s public site uses both “tier 3 data center” on the colocation page and “tier 1 data center” on the unmanaged dedicated server page, which is internally inconsistent. Because the reviewed official materials are not consistent, formal tier classification should be treated cautiously and not relied on as an audit grade verified certification claim.
Physical & Logical Security:
Cyber Wurx explicitly lists 24/7 multi layered security, 24/7 NOC support, and in house staff on its colocation page. Its 2014 SOC 2 announcement further references facility security, fire suppression, and access control systems, while older official material states the company maintained multiple data centers protected by state of the art security, fire suppression, emergency power, and access control systems.
Its managed services page also documents monitoring, intrusion detection, and OS level security updates for managed hosting customers. However, the reviewed sources do not clearly publish biometrics, mantraps, or detailed physical segregation standards beyond cages and multi layered security language.
Compliance & Standards:
Cyber Wurx publicly states it completed a SOC 2 Type II examination, and its official announcement says the review covered Security, Availability, Processing Integrity, Confidentiality, and Privacy. That is the strongest clearly published compliance item in the reviewed sources.
At the same time, Cyber Wurx’s current Terms of Service state that, unless otherwise agreed in writing, it does not guarantee services are compliant with industry specific regulations such as HIPAA or PCI DSS. No current public evidence was found in the reviewed sources for ISO 27001, ISO 9001, PCI DSS certification, or HIPAA certification.
🌐 Connectivity & Carrier Access
Carrier Neutrality:
Cyber Wurx explicitly describes its Atlanta colocation offering as carrier neutral. Its colocation page uses that exact term, and the bandwidth carriers page states that the facility has cross connect access to major providers in the 55 and 56 Marietta Street telco hotels.
The company also says it can interconnect customers to leading Tier 1 providers in the area and publishes a long list of carriers present in or accessible from the facility. That strongly supports a carrier neutral interconnection model in downtown Atlanta.
Network Capabilities:
Cyber Wurx publishes strong connectivity language. The data center page references multiple 10 GbE circuits, and the bandwidth carriers page describes a redundant multi homed BGP network, full UPS power with generator backup, and cross connect access to major providers.
The reviewed materials support interconnection and cross facility carrier access more clearly than they support a broad telecom product catalog. No clear public product pages were found for MPLS, SD WAN, private line, wavelength, dark fiber, or Ethernet as standalone named services.
Connectivity Use Cases:
The published offer supports customers that want downtown Atlanta colocation with carrier diversity, cross connects into major providers, and deployment flexibility from small footprints to private cages.
The service mix also supports dedicated hosting and managed hosting use cases for businesses that want bare metal infrastructure with Cyber Wurx technicians handling monitoring, updates, and operational tasks. Older official content also supports private cloud style use cases hosted in colocated infrastructure, but that appears more as a solution use case than as a clearly branded cloud catalog today.
💼 Who It Serves
Small businesses through enterprise organizations needing Atlanta colocation or dedicated hosting.
Customers that need carrier neutral deployments in the 55 Marietta interconnection district.
Organizations seeking managed dedicated or managed hosting support rather than fully self managed infrastructure.
Businesses deploying anything from 2U footprints to private cages.
