Case file — CD01A704
The idea
“You've probably gotten an email that says "Your data was involved in a breach. Change your password." That's it. That's all they tell you. You don't know what was taken, you don't know what to actually do about it, and you're left feeling vaguely scared before moving on with your day. That's the entire breach notification industry right now — and Securoxen is the thing that comes after. HIBP is the gold standard for breach checking. Troy Hunt built something genuinely useful. But it only checks one source, it tells you a breach happened, and it stops there. The problem is that a breach happening isn't the risk — what was in the breach is the risk. Was it just your email address? Fine. Was it your password, your physical address, your phone number, your financial data? Completely different threat level, completely different actions required. Nobody tells you that. Every tool either says "breach detected" and leaves you hanging, or tries to upsell you a VPN you don't need. Securoxen scans across five breach databases simultaneously — not just HIBP. On your first scan, free, we check everywhere. But more importantly, we tell you exactly what was exposed in each breach and give you specific fix steps for that breach. Not generic "change your password" advice. If your physical address leaked, we tell you to freeze your credit and opt out of data brokers. If your crypto wallet was exposed, the steps are completely different. We're not a detection tool. We're a response layer built on top of breach notifications. Three groups care most about this right now. Security-conscious professionals — lawyers, accountants, healthcare workers, anyone whose personal data getting out has real career consequences. Small businesses, where one employee's leaked credentials is a breach vector for the whole company and there's no security team to catch it. And crypto and DeFi users who are actively targeted, know it, and are willing to pay for real signal rather than generic alerts. The free tier gets you the full five-source scan on your first run — that's the moment where people see what's actually out there about them, often for the first time. Paid tiers get ongoing monitoring across all five sources with real-time alerts, sitting at $7 to $15 AUD a month. The free scan is deliberately generous because seeing four breaches you didn't know about, with specific fix steps, does the selling by itself. A few things we're still building — alert emails for ongoing monitoring, a browser extension for passive protection, and we're pre-revenue. But the core question we want answered is whether the free scan is compelling enough to drive sign-ups, and who the real paying customer turns out to be. The best way to test that is to go to securoxen.io, sign in with Google, scan your own email, and tell us what you expected to see versus what you actually saw.”