ClawBack is a platform for helping organizations detect data leaks. It’s a cloud-based engine focused on three specific kinds of leaked data - source code, device and application configurations and credentials. It systematizes many of the manual efforts which mature organizations had been doing either partially, or in an ad hoc fashion, and makes them ongoing, dependable and available to organizations of any size and technical capability.
The engine lets the customer pick monitoring terms, and yes, we have a very nice guide available in the online help to guide them. Once, the terms are chosen, the engine goes to work and begins to scour the sites most commonly associated with these types of leaks. At first, it does historical searches to catch the client up to the moment, and then, periodically, it provides ongoing searching for signs of leaked data.
Once a leaked dataset is found, the user is alerted and can view the findings in the web portal. They can take immediate action from the takedown advice we provide in online help. Email alerts, team accounts and alert exports for SEIM/SOAR integration are also available to customers at the advanced levels.
No Snusbase videos yet. You could help us improve this page by suggesting one.
Based on our record, Snusbase seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 4 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Hello, I have a question about sites like DeHashed.com, snusbase.com and intelx.io. Source: over 1 year ago
So if that is true, how could I go to the sites like https://intelx.io , https://dehashed.com/ ,https://snusbase.com/ and type email address that has been in a breach and obtain possible password and username sometimes for free, and sometimes for a couple of bucks? If what the OP of the linked post says is true. These platforms should not be legal, or am I missing something? Source: over 2 years ago
Usually it depends on where it will end up, you'll have to look through multiple different companies that pay to collect this information. Haveibeenpwned is a really great indicator to see the basics of where your information has been leaked through, but depending on the breach I'd recommend http://snusbase.com to get more details about what was contained in those databases. Source: over 2 years ago
My favorites are theses 3, and are the most updated & fastest updated. - https://pwndb2am4tzkvold.onion.ws/ - https://snusbase.com/ - Dehashed.com (very nice but not free :/). Source: about 3 years ago
DeHashed - DeHashed is the largest & fastest data breach search engine.
Authentic8 Silo - Authentic8 puts you in control of the cloud by delivering the browser as a service.
LeakCheck - Data breach search engine, low price starting from $10/mo, one email address for free, unlimited API, 7B+ entries
Sophos Endpoint Protection - Sophos Endpoint Protection helps secure your workstation.
have i been pwned? - Check if your account has been compromised in a data breach
Arpwatch - arpwatch is a computer software tool for monitoring Address Resolution Protocol traffic on a...