Whether you’re supporting a network of SMEs or larger corporate members, cyber risk is one of the fastest-growing threats your community faces.
Dark web monitoring
Protect your members and employees from hidden cyber threats
Proactive dark web monitoring that detects 17 data points from being compromised early — helping your organisation and members stay one step ahead of cyber criminals.
Cyber threats don’t always start inside your network.
Stolen credentials, leaked data and compromised systems often appear on the dark web long before organisations are aware of a breach.
Our dark web monitoring solution provides early warning signals, enabling trade associations and businesses to protect their people, data and reputation — before damage is done.
Trade associations offering value-added member benefits
Membership organisations protecting their communities
Businesses looking to strengthen cyber resilience
Affinity programmes seeking high-value, relevant solutions
Continuous Monitoring. Actionable Alerts
1. Data Surveillance
We continuously scan dark web marketplaces, forums and breach databases for exposed credentials and sensitive information.
2. Threat Detection
Our platform detects when employee emails, passwords or company data appear in compromised datasets.
3. Real-Time Alerts
Organisations receive immediate notifications so action can be taken before threats escalate via email or text
4. Guided Response
We provide clear remediation steps to reduce risk and prevent further exposure.
Why Organisations Choose Dark Web Monitoring
Early Breach Detection
Identify compromised credentials before they’re used in attacks.
Protect Your Members
Offer a valuable, proactive cyber protection service to your network.
Reduce Financial Risk
Avoid the high cost of ransomware, fraud and data breaches.
Strengthen Reputation
Demonstrate leadership in cyber risk management.
Simple to Deploy
No complex IT integration required.
Add Value to Your Membership Offering
Provide your members with access to enterprise-grade cyber protection — without the complexity or cost typically associated with security solutions.
Enhance your value proposition
Increase member retention and engagement
Create a new revenue stream (optional pricing model)
Position your organisation as a trusted advisor
What’s included
Dark web and deep web monitoring
Credential exposure tracking
Domain and email monitoring
Breach database scanning
Alert notifications and dashboards
Expert support and guidance
Up to 17 data points can be monitored which include:
Identifier | Why it matters |
Email address | The most commonly exposed identifier in data breaches. Often used as a username across multiple services, making a leaked email address a gateway to credential stuffing attacks. |
Full name | Your name is the anchor of your identity. When it appears in a breach – especially combined with other details – it gives fraudsters a ready-made starting point to impersonate you, open accounts in your name, or craft convincing phishing attacks. |
Mobile number | Targeted by SIM-swap fraud and used in SMS-based account takeover. Increasingly traded alongside email addresses in breach datasets. |
National Insurance number | A persistent, lifelong identifier that cannot be changed. Exposure can facilitate identity fraud, fraudulent benefit claims, and employment fraud. |
Passport number | Used to verify identity in financial and legal contexts. Exposure is particularly serious as passport numbers are difficult to replace and widely accepted as proof of identity. |
Driving Licence Number | Your driving licence number is a government-issued identifier accepted as proof of identity in many situations. If it’s exposed, it can be used to support fraudulent identity claims or combined with other data for financial fraud. |
IBAN | Your IBAN (International Bank Account Number) identifies your bank account for transfers. If exposed, it can be used in authorised push payment scams, fraudulent direct debit mandates, or to impersonate you in financial correspondence. |
Date of birth | Frequently combined with other identifiers in fraud. On its own it is low risk, but in combination with a name or NI number it can enable impersonation. |
Payment card number | Card numbers appearing in breach data may indicate skimming, point-of-sale compromise, or e-commerce theft. Early detection allows you to cancel and replace the card before fraudulent use. |
Bank account number | Exposure can facilitate authorised push payment (APP) fraud, where criminals impersonate your bank or a known payee to redirect transfers. |
IP address | Your IP address can reveal your approximate location and internet provider. In the wrong hands, it can be used to target you with attacks, link your activity across services, or bypass location-based security controls. |
Username / online handle | Usernames appearing in credential logs may indicate a specific service has been compromised, even if the associated password has been changed. |
Crypto wallet address | Your wallet address is publicly linked to your transaction history on the blockchain. If it’s associated with your identity in a breach, it exposes your holdings and activity to targeted theft attempts, scams, or extortion. |