You Don't Know How Exposed You Are. Now You Can Find Out.
Introducing DoxxScore, a self-assessment that scores your doxxing risk and tells you what to fix.
Most people picture doxxing as something that requires a hacker. Like someone breaking into accounts, leaking data, or doing something technically sophisticated.
That’s not how it usually works. In fact, the most common version requires no special skills at all.
The doxxer just needs a name, some publicly available websites, and about 20 minutes. Top sources they look at are people search sites, property records, and old social media accounts. Data broker sites that aggregate all of it in one place are even better.
The important takeaway is that the information needed to doxx you is already out there. Someone just has to look and put the pieces together.
Most people who care about privacy have done something about it. Switched to a different search engine, maybe. Stopped posting publicly as much. They’ve thought about it, which puts them ahead of most people, but thinking about it tends to produce a general sense of being careful rather than any real picture of what’s actually out there.
The gap between “I’m pretty private” and what someone could find about you in twenty minutes varies enormously depending on who you are and what you’ve done online over the past decade. Someone with a common name and no social media footprint has a different risk profile than someone with a decade of LinkedIn history, a public Instagram, and a home address on their business website.
The exposure also isn’t uniform across life circumstances.
People going through a divorce, changing jobs, or relocating often have vulnerabilities they haven’t stopped to consider. Attorneys, therapists, real estate agents, teachers, basically anyone in a public-facing role tends to be more findable than they realize, because their work requires a certain amount of visibility. Parents who posted about their kids through the 2010s have left a trail they’ve probably never looked at as a whole.
You can’t do much about any of this without first knowing where you stand.
What DoxxScore Does
DoxxScore is a self-assessment tool we built. It walks you through a five-section questionnaire covering seven risk categories, including search visibility, social media exposure, contact information accessibility and identity linkage. It then runs your email against known breach databases and calculates a personalized risk score from 0 to 100.
The output isn’t a generic checklist. It’s a prioritized action plan built around your answers, with difficulty ratings and time estimates for each step, so you know what to tackle first and what can wait. Delivered as a web report and a PDF sent to your email.
One-time cost of $19. No subscription, no recurring charges.


Why This Exists
The hardest part of improving your privacy isn’t finding advice. There’s no shortage of that.
Instead, the hardest part is knowing where to start when you don’t know how exposed you actually are.
DoxxScore answers that question first. Once you know your risk profile, the path forward gets a lot clearer.
If you’ve been meaning to get a handle on your digital exposure but haven’t known where to begin, this is a good place to start.
Take the assessment at doxxscore.com. Use discount code LAUNCH50 for 50% off (only 20 discounted spots, so don’t wait).
Questions about how it works, what the report looks like, or what goes into the scoring? Reply and ask.






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