ETHX
Healthcare Cloud Fax Infrastructure • Holmdel, NJ
The largest fax network on record. The category that names it does not exist.
Six million endpoints, thirteen patents, FedRAMP High Impact authorization on a 30-employee LLC — and the only retail partner with a public integration is now inside an unaligned competitor.
Issue No. 14
SHUR IQ
June 5, 2026
Vertical: Healthcare
6M+
Endpoints in SEN, the Secure Exchange Network (Feb 2017 floor)
13
Patents worldwide across two families
IL5
FedRAMP High Impact authorization, NOAA-sponsored, Nov 2025
$500K
Total disclosed institutional capital, single round in 2014
65.00
Brand Power Index · borderline Strong
02
Move 1 — Inflection
Two forces are converging that healthcare IT is not yet discussing in the same sentence. The cloud fax category is in growth mode, with forty percent of US health system executives reporting active adoption in Q1 2026. And the federal interoperability framework (TEFCA, QHINs designated December 2023, FHIR over Direct now in production) is the long-term replacement of fax as the transport for structured payloads. The wholesale infrastructure beneath the growth curve has not been named, scored, or stacked against the retail layer it serves.
Move 2 — How we look at it
We watch what the public says about a brand, where money and attention move through its business, and what its peers do. Then we score it on five things buyers actually care about: Awareness, Trust, Mission, Differentiation, and Loyalty. The weights shift by industry. In healthcare, Trust and Mission carry most of the score. etherFAX is the first company we have scored in healthcare, so this brief is also where we settle what those weights should be for the vertical.
Move 3 — The story is structural
The platform works. The product is real, the customers are real, the compliance and patent stack is real. What is interesting is one layer below. The slice of the market etherFAX actually wins has no name yet. The one retail partner that publicly used etherFAX is now inside a competitor. And the money they have on hand cannot pay for the next move on its own. The performance side of the company is solid. The structural side is where the next twelve months get decided.
- The wholesale-IaaS layer beneath cloud fax has no analyst name. etherFAX wins it; the analyst frame measures the retail layer above it. The category that would award the win does not exist.
- The single named retail integration partner was acquired by an unaligned competitor in March 2024. The Biscom-SEN integration (Feb 2016) is now inside Concord (Excellere Partners portfolio). One 2024 transaction reset the wholesale-channel exposure for the next combination cycle.
- Consensus is not declining. The widely-cited -3.36% YoY figure is wrong-year math. The correct 2025 number is roughly flat, with the corporate side actually growing about 6.5 percent and the consumer side wound down on purpose. etherFAX still scores ahead of Consensus on the healthcare brand score, but by less than a “Consensus is fading” reading would imply.
- etherFAX has raised $500,000 of disclosed institutional capital across 17 years. The consolidation phase the category is entering requires capital to be acquirer, target on own terms, or routed around. The capital structure does not fund the alternative.
— ShurIQ, Shur Creative Partners
etherFAX runs the largest fax network in the world, and nobody has a name for what that network actually is. The one retail partner who used it publicly is now inside a competitor. The next twelve months decide what etherFAX becomes.
The Reframe — Shur Creative Partners
03
If you Google etherFAX, the search results put them next to Consensus eFax and OpenText RightFax: another cloud fax vendor, smaller than the others. That is not wrong. It is also not the read. The companies on that shortlist are the ones a hospital buys cloud fax from. etherFAX is the network that delivers the faxes once the hospital has signed with one of those companies. Three of the names on the shortlist plug into etherFAX. The hospital exec almost never sees that.
So there are two etherFAXes. The one on the Gartner Peer Insights list, which looks like a niche cloud fax vendor with $5M in revenue and thirty employees. And the one that operates six million endpoints, holds thirteen patents, carries the kind of federal authorization usually held by companies a hundred times its size, and serves as the underlying transport for several of the brands the buyer recognizes. The second one has no name. That is what is at stake.
04
| [1] |
6,000,000+ endpoints |
etherFAX’s Secure Exchange Network (SEN), the world’s largest software-defined fax network as of the Feb 21, 2017 disclosure (recycled unchanged in every 2024-2025 partner release). The wholesale-layer scale figure that defines what etherFAX actually is. |
| [2] |
13 patents worldwide |
11 issued US patents + 1 Singapore + 1 Canada across two families: Remote FAX Interconnect (7) and Content Transfer (4). The IP moat that makes the wholesale layer legally defensible. |
| [3] |
FedRAMP HIGH + DoD IL5 |
FedRAMP HIGH civilian baseline + DoD CC SRG IL5 cybersecurity controls in AWS GovCloud High, NOAA-sponsored, ATO November 18, 2025. Plus HITRUST CSF r2, SOC 2, PCI DSS 4.01 Level 1, NIST v1.1. The unusual compliance depth on a 30-employee company. |
| [4] |
~30 employees |
LinkedIn surfaces 32 profiles; six named executives carry the company (Paul Banco, Robert Cichielo, Emil Sturniolo, Adam Blackin, Jeff Volk, Kirsch). The talent concentration risk that runs alongside the IP moat. |
| [5] |
$500K disclosed capital |
A single Lighter Capital revenue-based debt round, October 2014. No subsequent venture, private-equity, or public listing. Annual revenue estimated at $5M plus or minus $1M (RocketReach, Growjo). The capital structure that frames the consolidation-phase trap. |
| [6] |
March 2024 |
Concord acquired Biscom, the only publicly-named etherFAX retail integration partner (joint press release Feb 18, 2016). Combined entity reports ~4,500 customers and 4 billion pages per year on its own platform, not on SEN. The realized channel-partner-acquired-by-competitor event. |
| [7] |
~$350M Consensus, flat |
Consensus Cloud Solutions (NASDAQ: CCSI): $362.6M (2023) to $350.4M (2024) to ~$349.7M (2025); 2025 YoY actually -0.2 percent. Corporate channel +6.5 percent; SoHo channel deliberately wound down. The retail scale benchmark. Consensus is the cohort’s commanding Awareness brand, holding scale. |
| [8] |
40% of health-system execs |
Report active cloud fax adoption (Sage Growth Partners Q1 2026 survey of 100 US health system + hospital executives). Category has moved from emerging to established. The buyer-side adoption rate the wholesale layer is invisible inside. |
05
Notable · Identity
The name points at the old product. The new company is something else.
The corporate name · what the buyer hears
The name “etherFAX” was chosen in 2009 to describe a product. The company has since become something bigger. The product line still exists, but most of the value now lives in the network underneath it and the patents that defend the network. Buyers do not see any of that when they read the name. They see “eFax” or “RightFax” and assume the company is more of the same. As long as the name keeps pulling them toward that assumption, the rest of the company has a harder time getting credit for what it has actually built.
The fixGive the network its own name and lead with it on every buyer-facing page. The company stays etherFAX, so engineers and partners keep their trust in the brand. The new phrase carries what the old name keeps hiding.
Critical · Category
No analyst category names the layer the network occupies.
The wholesale layer · the analyst frames that see it
Analysts do not have a name for what etherFAX actually does. Gartner has no Magic Quadrant for it. Forrester has no Wave. The Gartner Peer Insights page lists etherFAX next to twenty other companies, mostly retail cloud fax vendors that buy and resell the kind of network etherFAX runs. The Q1 2026 Sage survey of a hundred hospital executives asked which vendor they buy cloud fax from. It did not ask whose network delivers the fax once the vendor has been chosen. Without a category, etherFAX cannot win the category. The hospital decision-maker reading the analyst page never learns there is a different layer at all.
The fixCommission analyst recognition for the wholesale fax infrastructure layer. Make the layer separation legible before the consolidation phase compresses the wholesale tier into the retail one.
Critical · Channel
The channel that was acquired by a competitor.
Biscom · Concord (Excellere Partners) · March 2024
For years, etherFAX’s network sat under Biscom, a retail cloud fax vendor that serves hospitals. That was the one public partnership of that kind. In March 2024, Concord (owned by a private-equity firm called Excellere Partners) bought Biscom. So the partner that used to depend on etherFAX’s network now lives inside a company that competes with etherFAX’s other partners. The combined Concord-Biscom now reports about 4,500 customers and four billion pages a year running on its own platform, not on etherFAX’s. The other big retail names look similar. RightFax is not a partner. OpenText runs its own cloud transport for RightFax, and etherFAX actively pitches hospitals on replacing RightFax through a different partner, Hyland. The wholesale story etherFAX tells itself was always thin. After March 2024, it is one bad deal away from disappearing.
The fixStand a buyer-facing health-system advisory channel parallel to the wholesale channel. Two to four senior advisors with clinical-IT and federal procurement fluency. Visible insurance against further channel acquisition.
Notable · Portfolio
Four product names presented as peers; an architectural stack rendered flat.
SEN / ECP / SENx / AI Insights · the navigation that presents them
SEN is the network. ECP is the encrypted protocol that runs on the network. SENx adds another layer of encryption. AI Insights reads the documents that arrive through the network and pulls structured data out of them. Read from inside the company, that is a stack: each piece sits on top of the one before it. Read from the product page, it is four products listed side by side as if a buyer were supposed to pick one. The thirteen patents make the stack defensible if a buyer ever sees it as a stack. The page does not let them. Pricing teams at competitors do not realize the patents are there; buyers do not realize the layers are layered.
The fixReorganize product presentation as a stack diagram. Each layer scores Differentiation separately; the composite is the moat. The product page, the sales deck, and the analyst brief share one stack.
Critical · Capital
Five hundred thousand dollars of disclosed capital, seventeen years.
Lighter Capital October 2014 · the consolidation phase the category is now entering
etherFAX has raised half a million dollars in seventeen years. One debt round from Lighter Capital in 2014, nothing else on the public record. No venture money, no private-equity check, no public stock. Around them, the market has money. Consensus is a public company and has been buying AI features for four years. OpenText is a $5 billion parent, restructuring its fax line. Concord just paid for Biscom. When a market begins to consolidate, the companies that own cash either buy or get bought; the companies that don’t get worked around. etherFAX has something worth buying. It does not have what it would need to buy on its own terms, and it does not have what would let it walk away from a low offer.
The fixRaise institutional growth capital before the next category consolidation move closes. Optionality is highest now, before the next comparable retires from the board.
Open the Risk Radar →
06
The cloud fax vendors a hospital actually compares when it is making a decision. etherFAX shows up on the same list, but the company is selling something different from the others on it.
| Dimension |
etherFAX |
Consensus eFax |
OpenText RightFax |
Concord (Biscom incl.) |
Retarus |
Documo |
Sinch Fax |
| Layer |
Wholesale infrastructure |
Retail |
Retail (cloud + on-prem) |
Retail |
Retail enterprise |
Retail (API-first) |
Retail (in CPaaS) |
| 2025 revenue |
~$5M |
$349.7M (-0.2% YoY) |
inside $5.17B OTEX (-10.4%) |
private (~4,500 customers / 4B pages/yr post-Biscom) |
private, ~top-5 by revenue |
~$15M |
inside Sinch group |
| Customer / endpoint scale |
6M+ endpoints (Feb 2017) |
65K corporate + ~638K SoHo = ~703K |
enterprise install base |
~4,500 customers, 4B pages/yr |
enterprise |
API developers |
CPaaS-bundled |
| Patents (issued) |
13 worldwide (11 US + 1 SG + 1 CA) |
J2/Ziff Davis legacy (multiple) |
OpenText legacy (multiple) |
private (TBD) |
private (TBD) |
none disclosed |
inside Sinch |
| Federal authorization |
FedRAMP HIGH + DoD IL5 |
(TBD) |
OpenText Moderate parent |
(TBD) |
EU GDPR depth |
(TBD) |
(TBD) |
| AI / IDP strategy |
partner-not-build (Weave, Hyland) |
build (Clarity, HIMSS22 launch 2022) |
build (OpenText AI) |
DSM + product |
enterprise workflow |
API-first |
none |
| Capital structure |
$500K Lighter Capital (2014) |
Public NASDAQ CCSI |
Inside OpenText |
Excellere Partners PE (2019) |
private German parent |
$38.5M VC (latest) |
inside Sinch |
The cohort sorts into three structural categories. Public-market scale anchors the top tier: Consensus Cloud Solutions and OpenText, with $349 million and $5.17 billion of revenue respectively, deploying balance sheets at the intelligent-document-processing problem and at consolidation moves. Private-equity scale anchors the middle: Concord (with Biscom inside since March 2024) and Retarus, both with backers positioned for category roll-up. Founder-and-revenue scale anchors the bottom: etherFAX, Documo, and Sinch’s fax line, each operating with $5 million to $25 million of revenue and limited disclosed institutional capital.
etherFAX is the only entrant on the cohort whose value proposition is structurally wholesale. The endpoints are reached through every other entrant’s customer relationships, not etherFAX’s. Read by row, the table is a comparative product matrix. Read by column, the table is a value-chain map with etherFAX at one architectural layer and the other six at another. The cohort comparison the buyer wants is the one the cohort cannot draw without the layer separation made legible first.
Open the Wholesale Channel map →
08
A single number out of 100 for how clearly etherFAX’s position lands with the market. Built from five pieces. In healthcare, Trust and Mission carry most of the weight; Awareness counts for less.
65.00 / 100
Composite Index — Five dimensions, healthcare-weighted
Band: Average · borderline Strong
Vertical: Healthcare
The shape of the score is what you would expect from a company whose value lives behind the scenes. etherFAX is strong on Trust and Differentiation: real compliance, real patents, a real network. They are weak on Awareness, because buyers do not see them, and on Loyalty, because the one named partner they had moved into a competitor in 2024. In healthcare, Trust and Mission are most of the score, so the strengths carry the number. Awareness counts for less. The two weak scores together are the place to push next, and they are not independent problems: both come from being invisible to the buyer.
Awareness 30 / 100
Hospital executives and IT buyers mostly do not know the company by name. There is no Gartner Magic Quadrant for what etherFAX does, and no Forrester Wave. Gartner Peer Insights lists the company alongside twenty retail vendors, and the reviews on Capterra and G2 are sparse. The low score is what the public absence shows.
Trust 75 / 100
The certifications that hospitals and federal agencies care about are all in place. HIPAA, SOC 2, HITRUST r2, PCI DSS, NIST, and the federal high-impact authorization that includes defense workloads (with NOAA as the sponsor, completed November 2025). Thirteen patents protect what the network actually does. Buyers who do find them rate them well.
Mission 65 / 100
The company does what it says it does, day after day. The public mission language is generic (“secure document exchange”). The gap between today’s product (moving faxes safely) and where healthcare is heading (structured data that talks between systems) is the part of the mission that AI Insights and the Hyland partnership are starting to close.
Differentiation 75 / 100
Thirteen patents and a federal authorization level that almost none of the retail vendors hold. On paper, very few competitors can match what etherFAX runs. The catch is that the part of the company that is genuinely different sits one layer below where the buyer is looking, so the difference does not always come through.
Loyalty 55 / 100
The partner network creates real switching costs once vendors have integrated. But the one publicly-named retail partner ended up inside a competitor in March 2024, which is exactly the loyalty failure mode this score measures. There is no second public example to balance against it yet.
What is dragging the score down
Awareness and Loyalty are the two low scores, and they are the same problem in two places. The part of the company that wins is the part the buyer never sees, so they cannot become aware of it. And because partners reach the buyer instead of etherFAX, the partner relationships are what holds the loyalty together; one of them moving (as Biscom did in 2024) is enough to put the loyalty score under pressure.
How to lift it
The same two moves that close two of the risks above also lift these scores. Getting analysts to put a name on the layer (Move 02) raises Awareness over time. Hiring the visible advisors (Move 03) raises Loyalty by spreading the risk across more relationships. If the money in Move 05 comes together, both can happen at the pace the market is consolidating at. With both in motion, the score moves from 65 toward something closer to 72 inside a year.
Where the score could land in twelve months → about 72 out of 100
How etherFAX stacks up in healthcare
1
etherFAX
65.00
Wins on Trust and Differentiation. The compliance, patents, and federal authorization carry the score in healthcare, where those count for most of the weight.
2
Consensus eFax
60.20
Best known brand in the group. Their corporate business grew about 6.5 percent in 2025; the consumer line was deliberately scaled back. Earlier reports that called Consensus “declining” were reading the wrong year of numbers.
3
OpenText RightFax
59.25
Long history with enterprise IT. Their cloud version is under pressure as the parent company restructures, which is showing up in the score.
3
Concord Technologies
59.25
Tied with RightFax. Mid-sized vendor that already bundles secure messaging with fax. The same company that bought Biscom in March 2024, the event that pulled etherFAX’s loyalty score down.
Comparisons made only inside healthcare. etherFAX is the first company we have scored in this category, so the weights used here become the reference for the next one.
Open the Brand Score comparison →
09
Five moves. Each one closes one of the risks in the section above. The chips on each card show how urgent it is, how much work it takes, and what kind of impact it lands.
01
Lead with a name for the network.
Priority Medium
Effort Low
Impact Medium
Pick a phrase for the layer (“Encrypted Fax SDN,” “Wholesale Secure Exchange,” or something better) and put it everywhere a buyer is looking. The company stays etherFAX. Engineers and existing partners already know that name and trust it. But the page a hospital reads should lead with the network. The new phrase carries the part of the company that the old name keeps hiding.
Closes → R1 The Name Problem
02
Get Gartner or Forrester to put the layer on paper.
Priority Critical
Effort Medium
Impact High
Hire Gartner or Forrester to write a piece that separates the network layer etherFAX runs from the retail vendors stacked on top of it. Pay them to draw the line on paper, so analysts and buyers have a shared way of talking about it. Without that piece, the category etherFAX wins does not exist publicly. With it, the win starts showing up in shortlists. Plan on six months to get a first analyst piece out, nine months to be the named example in the category.
Closes → R2 The Unclaimed Category
03
Hire two to four advisors hospitals already trust.
Priority Critical
Effort Medium
Impact High
Hire two to four senior people whose names hospitals already know: former hospital CIOs, federal procurement officers, leaders from past interoperability projects. Their job is to be visible and credible to the buyers etherFAX never meets directly. They do not sell. They do not compete with Hyland or Lexmark or Canon. They are insurance against another Concord-Biscom moment, and a way for etherFAX to know what the buyer is thinking, without building a sales force.
Closes → R3 The Channel That Was Acquired
04
Show the four products as one stack.
Priority Medium
Effort Low
Impact Medium
Redraw the product page so the four pieces look like the stack they are: the network at the bottom, the protocol above it, the encryption on top of that, the extraction layer on top of that, the partner integrations on top of everything. Use the same diagram on the sales deck and in the analyst piece in Action 02. Show the thirteen patents next to the layers they actually defend, so a buyer can see why each part is hard to copy. Today they look like four products. They should look like one platform.
Closes → R4 Four Names, One SKU
05
Raise the money to have options.
Priority Critical
Effort High
Impact High
Start conversations with two kinds of buyers right now. Growth-stage healthcare-IT funds that already own a piece of the interoperability story, and bigger companies with adjacent fax or document businesses that would want what etherFAX runs. The point is not to sell the company. The point is to have real options on the table before the next deal in the market closes. Right now, etherFAX cannot acquire anyone, cannot walk away from a low offer, and cannot keep building at a pace that matches what Consensus and OpenText are doing. Money fixes that. Nothing else does.
Closes → R5 The Consolidation Phase Trap
How they sequence
Start the capital conversation today. Hire the analysts and the advisors over the next six months, in parallel. Rename the layer when the analyst piece is far enough along that the new name lands somewhere visible. Redraw the product page anytime in the next sixty days. Without the capital conversation moving, the others slow down.
The next thirty days do one thing: prove the layer the network occupies has a name, prove the channel can survive another acquisition like 2024, and prove the capital path exists.
The Ask — Shur Creative Partners
10
30 Days
Three short documents. One decision at the end of the month.
- One page on the name. Pick the phrase that describes the network the company actually runs. Test it on three analysts at Gartner, Forrester, and IDC. Keep the phrase that survives the conversation.
- One page on the partners. List every company that plugs into etherFAX’s network. Mark how much revenue depends on each one. Pick the three partnerships most exposed to another deal like the Concord-Biscom deal in 2024, and write down what would happen if one of them moved.
- One page on the money. Name five to seven funds or strategic buyers who would be interested. Sketch the size of round that would fund the analyst work, the advisor hires, and a possible acquisition. Decide what would trigger the first conversation.
At the end of the month
etherFAX has a name for the layer, a clear picture of where the partner risk sits, and a list of the people to call about money. The decision is which of the five moves above to start first. The brief argues for the money conversation first, then the analyst work and the advisor hires in parallel.
When the cloud fax category names its consolidation winner, will etherFAX be the network the winner runs on, or the network the winner buys?
— ShurIQ, Shur Creative Partners · June 5, 2026
12
Five Interactive Views
Five interactive views of what the brief just walked through. The network at scale, the five risks side by side, the brand score next to the other companies in the category, the partner channel before and after the 2024 Concord acquisition, and a one-screen summary of the whole thing.
13
Glossary
- Structural Brand Power Index
- A composite 0 to 100 read of how clearly a platform’s position is articulated to the market, across five dimensions weighted by vertical. The healthcare profile pays Trust 35%, Mission 25%, Differentiation 15%, Loyalty 15%, Awareness 10%. Brands are compared only within the same vertical.
- Reframe
- A single conceptual move that shifts the frame inside which a question is asked. One Reframe per brief. The body of the brief demonstrates the move rather than deriving toward it.
- Risk Set
- Five named risks, each occupying a distinct altitude-by-domain cell on the brand-report ladder. Each risk pairs a connection (the two things it holds together) with a bridge concept (the move that closes it).
- The Broken Edge
- The pair of Index dimensions that share a single underlying cause, so that one editorial move lifts both at once. For etherFAX, Awareness paired with Loyalty.
Methodology
Structural Brand Power Index methodology version 3, five dimensions read against the healthcare vertical weight profile. An InfraNodus knowledge graph was constructed for the analysis to map the discourse position of etherFAX against the retail cloud-fax cohort. A Phase 1.5 four-ledger multi-agent fact-check was completed with gate-pass-with-corrections status; twenty-seven corrections were applied before this brief was rendered. The healthcare weight profile carries Placeholder status in the Index methodology document, and etherFAX is the first scored brand in this vertical. The brief defines the profile via this score, and any future healthcare scoring will calibrate against it.
Source Index
| 1 | Corporate | etherFAX SEN endpoint disclosure (Feb 21, 2017) |
| 2 | Corporate | etherFAX leadership team page |
| 3 | IP | etherFAX IP portfolio page · USPTO assignee search (11 US + 1 SG + 1 CA across Remote FAX Interconnect and Content Transfer families) |
| 4 | Compliance | etherFAX security page · FedRAMP Marketplace ID FR2523143582, ATO November 18, 2025 |
| 5 | Financials | BusinessWire 2014 — Lighter Capital revenue-based debt round, October 2014. Aggregator estimates (RocketReach, Growjo) for ~$5M plus or minus $1M annual revenue |
| 6 | Competitors | Concord Technologies — Biscom acquisition release, March 2024. Combined entity ~4,500 customers / 4B pages/year disclosure |
| 7 | Competitors | Consensus Cloud Solutions (NASDAQ: CCSI) — 2023, 2024, 2025 reported revenue; DCFmodeling / StockAnalysis / Consensus 10-K segment data |
| 8 | Competitors | OpenText FY25 revenue ($5.17B, -10.4% YoY) · OpenText earnings releases |
| 9 | Competitors | Retarus, Documo, Sinch fax line — public company surfaces and disclosed customer-scale references |
| 10 | Market | Sage Growth Partners Q1 2026 survey of 100 US health system and hospital executives on cloud fax adoption |
| 11 | Regulatory | TEFCA framework · QHIN designations (December 2023) · FHIR over Direct production references — ONC and Sequoia Project public materials |
| 12 | Regulatory | HITRUST CSF r2 · SOC 2 · PCI DSS 4.01 Level 1 · NIST v1.1 — etherFAX disclosed certifications |
| 13 | Customer | Gartner Peer Insights (etherFAX listing) · Capterra (5.0 / 2 reviews) · G2 reviews |
| 14 | Partner | etherFAX-Biscom joint announcement, February 18, 2016 · subsequent partner releases (Hyland, Lexmark, Canon, RICOH, Xerox, Weave) |
| 15 | Headcount | LinkedIn etherFAX company page (32 employee profiles) · Craft.co aggregator data |
| 16 | Competitor IP | RightFax Connect (OpenText) marketing materials · etherFAX “Premier RightFax Replacement” Hyland OnBase positioning page |
| 17 | Competitor IP | Concord Clarity launch (HIMSS22, March 2022) — Concord product release |
| 18 | Competitor cap | Documo VC raise ($38.5M latest round) — Crunchbase aggregator |
| 19 | PE portfolio | Excellere Partners portfolio — Concord acquisition (~March 2019) · Biscom subsequent acquisition March 2024 |
| 20 | Methodology | Structural Brand Power Index methodology v3 · InfraNodus knowledge graph constructed for this analysis · Phase 1.5 four-ledger fact-check ledger (27 corrections applied) |
Disclosure
SHUR IQ intelligence is not a sales pitch and is not affiliated with etherFAX, LLC. The brief reads brand strength from the outside through public materials, third-party data services, and the InfraNodus discourse map. No internal etherFAX data, transcripts, or post-call analyses were used. Every numeric claim traces to the Numbers Spine and the Source Index above. Competitive framing rests on cohort-public surfaces and disclosed financial filings; where a competitor’s revenue is private, the absence is noted in the cohort table.