Hushfolk
Example scan preview
Free scan output preview
Email vector checked
Your email was analysed against exposure sources.
Resolved
Recommended next step
Review your personalised exposure summary, then decide what to remove, monitor, or escalate.
EXPOSURE REUSE CHECK
Spam calls, scam emails, and strange login alerts can be symptoms of wider exposure. Start with one email and see whether it connects to breach records, broker profiles, aliases, or address signals.
The annoying signals are often the first clue. The scan shows whether they connect to something bigger.
Quick scan
We use this email only to generate your exposure preview. We do not sell scan inputs or use them to build advertising profiles.
No card before scan
No account before scan
Evidence before payment
Scan input not sold
Hushfolk
Free scan output preview
Email vector checked
Your email was analysed against exposure sources.
Resolved
Recommended next step
Review your personalised exposure summary, then decide what to remove, monitor, or escalate.
Trust
No card before scan
Start with a free preview before any subscription or billing decision.
Evidence before payment
Upgrade only if the result shows exposure worth acting on.
EU-hosted
Your scan is handled on controlled European infrastructure.
Human-reviewed workflow
Confirmed broker exposure can be checked before removal requests are dispatched.
WHY THIS MATTERS
Most exposure does not begin with a dramatic event. It starts with small signals that feel annoying, suspicious, and easy to ignore.
Spam calls
Why do they keep calling me?
Your phone number may be circulating through marketing lists, broker records, old signups, or leaked datasets.
Scam texts
How did they get my number?
Delivery scams, bank impersonation, and fake support messages often rely on reused contact details.
Strange emails
Why am I getting this now?
Your email may have appeared in breaches, scraped lists, phishing databases, or old contact files.
Login alerts
Is someone trying my accounts?
Old credentials and exposed emails can be tested across services, especially where passwords were reused.
FROM NOISE TO EXPOSURE
How one leaked email becomes a wider exposure map
One spam call does not mean your identity is at risk. But repeated signals can be worth checking because exposed details are often matched, copied, and reused over time.
The scan helps identify where fragments connect so you can prioritise review, removal, and monitoring in the right order.
Run free scanA contact detail leaks
An email or phone number appears in a breach, scraped list, signup leak, or broker-style dataset.
Records get matched
Old details may connect to names, aliases, addresses, relatives, workplaces, or account history.
Targeting gets easier
More context can make scam calls, phishing emails, fake support messages, or impersonation attempts more believable.
Cleanup becomes harder
Records can be copied, refreshed, resold, or reappear after manual opt-outs.
SCAN CHECKS
The free scan starts with one email, then helps identify whether it connects to exposure signals that should be reviewed, removed, or monitored.
Run free scanNo card. No account before scan. Evidence before payment.
Exposure path
Checks whether your email appears across known exposure sources.
Surfaces breach metadata tied to the same identity vector.
Highlights indicators of broker-side identity profiling.
Maps linked aliases and identity fragments worth review.
Adds location-linked context where relevant to prioritisation.
Shows what should be reviewed, removed, or monitored first.
Exposed emails and old credentials can feed login attempts, reset flows, or impersonation attempts.
Old records can connect emails to addresses, aliases, relatives, or work history.
More context can make phishing, fake support calls, or fraud attempts more believable.
Data can reappear after broker refreshes, breach compilations, or copied lists.
Start with one email. See what connects.
Run free scanAFTER THE SCAN
Confirmed exposure becomes a reviewed workflow: map the signal, verify dispatch readiness, and monitor outcomes with an evidence trail.
Readable product interface previews shown.
Exposure intelligence baseline


Product proof
Hushfolk gives users a clear view of exposure intelligence, broker review, monitoring status, and evidence trails.
Dispatch quality control
Hushfolk uses team-reviewed broker dispatch. A trained reviewer checks the request and delivery path before dispatch, improving request quality when broker forms and intake routes change.
Product interface preview shown
Preview

Public breach intelligence feed
Public incidents show how often customer, household, health, education, and account data becomes part of wider exposure risk.
Compiled from public breach, fraud, and privacy metadata. No raw leaked records are republished.
Reviewed weekly from public metadata sources and context cards when live consumer incidents are sparse. Feed source: multi-source. Cached 2026-06-06.
Rotating metadata spotlight
FIFA World Cup 2026 Scams Are Already Live: Fake Sites, Banking Malware, and Stolen Logins
The Hacker News · 2026-06-05 · no raw records
The Hacker News
Security researchers and the FBI are warning that a wave of FIFA-themed fraud is already hitting World Cup 2026 fans, days before the June 11 kickoff. Recent reports describe thousands of lookalike FIFA domains, banking…
Exposed data classes
The Register
Totally different attack from the break-in last month. Oh so that's OK then
Exposed data classes
BleepingComputer
Tech giant Toshiba and mega-retailer Muji warned visitors that suspicious sign-in screens popping up on their websites could collect credentials. [...]
Exposed data classes
The Register
It was far too easy for a hacker to get the information
Exposed data classes
The feed shows breach metadata, source links, exposed data classes, and consequence framing only. It does not show raw records, dump samples, paste links, or personal identifiers.
Local exposure context
A leaked email is one signal. Exposure tied to addresses, aliases, relatives, or places connected to you can change what should be reviewed first. Hushfolk uses local context to help prioritise removal and monitoring. It does not predict incidents or guarantee outcomes.
Local context is used to support prioritisation only. It does not claim guaranteed prevention or certainty.
Local context signal
An abstract area-awareness layer that supports review order when exposure is tied to meaningful local context.
Exposure tied to known address context can shift what gets reviewed first.
Related records may connect household members and change review urgency.
Local signals are used to support triage, not prediction or surveillance claims.
Hushfolk helps prioritise removal and monitoring. It does not predict incidents or guarantee outcomes.
Pricing
Run the scan first. If the result shows exposure worth reviewing, choose the level of support that fits your urgency.
Core protection after confirmed exposure.
€14.99/mo
Priority handling for higher-risk exposure.
€29.99/mo
Chosen when higher-risk exposure needs faster review and priority handling.
Identity masking waitlist.
Coming soon
Start with a scan. Pay only when there is something worth acting on.
Human-reviewed broker dispatch is intentional: brittle automation often fails when broker forms, flows, or intake routes change.
A trained team member checks request quality and delivery path before dispatch, improving accuracy and success rate.
Comparison
Most privacy tools focus on removal. Hushfolk starts with evidence: scan first, map what was found, review dispatch, then track what comes back.
Competitor coverage and features change by region and plan. This comparison is based on public positioning and should be reviewed periodically.
UK/EU-native privacy framing
Yes
Free exposure scan before account
Yes
Command Centre exposure map
Yes
Team-reviewed dispatch
Concierge-reviewed
Breach monitoring
Yes
Evidence trail
Yes
30-day SLA tracking
Yes
Identity masking roadmap
Roadmap
UK/EU-native privacy framing
US-first
Free exposure scan before account
Varies
Command Centre exposure map
Not core positioning
Team-reviewed dispatch
Varies
Breach monitoring
Plan-dependent
Evidence trail
Varies
30-day SLA tracking
Varies
Identity masking roadmap
Varies
UK/EU-native privacy framing
Varies
Free exposure scan before account
Varies
Command Centre exposure map
Not core positioning
Team-reviewed dispatch
Varies
Breach monitoring
Varies
Evidence trail
Varies
30-day SLA tracking
Varies
Identity masking roadmap
Varies
UK/EU-native privacy framing
Varies
Free exposure scan before account
Plan-dependent
Command Centre exposure map
Varies
Team-reviewed dispatch
Varies
Breach monitoring
Plan-dependent
Evidence trail
Plan-dependent
30-day SLA tracking
Varies
Identity masking roadmap
Varies
Trust model
Hushfolk keeps key guarantees explicit before and after cleanup workflows begin.
Start with one email and see evidence before payment.
The first step is private and minimal by design.
Track what was found, actioned, returned, or refused.
A trained reviewer checks target and request path quality.
Privacy rights controls are available through dedicated routes.
Account controls remain visible throughout the workflow.
Questions
The scan is the first step, not a payment trap. These answers cover what Hushfolk does, where human review helps, and where the limits are.
Dispatch trust note
Team-reviewed broker dispatch helps avoid failed submissions when broker routes change. This improves request quality and delivery confidence without overpromising outcomes.
No. Start with one email and see whether there is evidence worth acting on. Account setup only becomes relevant if you want Hushfolk to save the report, monitor changes, or dispatch takedowns.
No card is required before the scan. The first step is deliberately small: map the exposure, then decide whether the evidence justifies a paid removal or monitoring workflow.
No tool can promise that every spam signal stops immediately. Hushfolk helps identify whether those signals connect to broader exposure so you can prioritise removal and monitoring work.
No service can guarantee complete deletion across every source. Hushfolk supports removal workflows for confirmed exposure, tracks outcomes, and keeps monitoring active where data can return.
Hushfolk uses team-reviewed broker dispatch. Requests are checked before sending because broker forms and intake routes change often, and brittle automation can silently fail.
No. A VPN hides some browsing traffic and a password manager protects logins. Hushfolk maps where your personal data appears, supports reviewed takedown workflows, and keeps an evidence trail.
Returned records are tracked instead of hidden. Hushfolk records what reappeared, updates status, and keeps monitoring active so you can decide what to re-escalate.
Sovereign is a coming-soon identity masking route. It is currently a waitlist, not a live feature.
PRIVACY GUIDES
Practical guides for understanding breach alerts, broker profiles, exposed addresses, and cleanup steps after evidence appears.
Address exposure
A practical guide to finding exposed address records without republishing private data.
Read guideBreach response
How to respond calmly when breach metadata shows your email was involved.
Read guideBroker profiles
Why broker profiles feel invasive and how small fragments become searchable identity maps.
Read guideLocal context
How local context can affect what should be reviewed first without claiming to predict crime.
Read guideOPTIONAL GUIDANCE
You can run the scan immediately, or choose the route that best matches what you are worried about.
For household, family, address, and historical exposure concerns.
Guidance focuses on household-linked exposure and records that make private life searchable.
For founders, creators, professionals, and public-facing people managing reputation or impersonation risk.
Guidance prioritises visibility, impersonation risk, and escalation-ready evidence.
Waitlist for future masked-contact and lower-footprint workflows.
This route is being prepared for people who need higher-discretion workflows.
Not sure? Start with the free scan.
Run free scanUK FRAUD CONTEXT
Most spam never becomes serious. But exposed personal details can make fraud attempts more targeted, more believable, and harder to ignore.
Based on reported UK fraud-loss data. This is wider market context, not a prediction of your personal risk.
£37 per second estimateFirst step
Start with one email. See whether spam calls, scam emails, login alerts, or breach signals connect to a wider exposure map.
No card. No account before scan. Evidence before payment.
Start with one email to map broker exposure, breach traces, and linked identity signals. The first scan is a prioritization step: it helps you decide what needs immediate action, what can wait, and which records are likely to return after a takedown attempt.
After triage, move to verified route guidance and keep a simple evidence trail for every request: date submitted, route used, confirmation details, and recheck window. That log is what turns one-off removals into repeatable risk reduction over time.