Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
DigitalDetox is a cybersecurity service focused on removing personal privacy data. Based on the extracted content, it addresses the issue of users’ home addresses, phone numbers, and personal details potentially being exposed across 200+ websites. It scans for this information and then automatically sends POPIA removal requests. It is closer to a “personal attack surface reduction” and privacy-leak remediation tool than to a traditional firewall, antivirus product, or enterprise perimeter security solution.
In terms of protection type, DigitalDetox mainly targets the risk of personal information being exposed on the public internet. It can help reduce the likelihood of harassment, social engineering attacks, identity impersonation, and targeted scams. The deployment model appears to be an online service; the text only mentions “Free scan — takes 2 minutes,” without clarifying whether it offers a browser extension, mobile app, or enterprise dashboard. On compliance, the service explicitly mentions POPIA removal requests, indicating that its removal process is related to POPIA, but it does not disclose any formal certifications, privacy/security audits, or data processing policy. There is currently limited information about management and alerting capabilities. It can only be confirmed that it searches 200+ websites and automatically sends removal requests; there is no description of continuous monitoring, removal-status tracking, email alerts, or reporting features. Integration capabilities are also not disclosed, such as API, SSO, SIEM, or enterprise collaboration support.
Pricing information is limited. The text only states that a free 2-minute scan is available, without explaining whether the removal service after the scan is paid, or providing details on plans, renewals, refunds, or payment methods. As a result, its value for money can only be assessed in a neutral-to-conservative way: the free scan is appealing, but if the core removal capability requires payment, users still need to confirm the actual cost.
The main advantage is its very clear positioning: it directly addresses the problem of sensitive information such as home addresses and phone numbers being published on data sites. The claim of covering 200+ websites also suggests a certain breadth of coverage. Automated removal requests can reduce the burden of manually filing complaints site by site. The drawbacks are equally clear: there is no information on success rates, processing timelines, geographic applicability, security measures, data retention practices, or support channels. For users with strict compliance requirements or enterprises considering procurement, the currently available public information is not sufficient to support a purchasing decision.
This service is better suited to individual users, especially those concerned about their personal details being exposed in overseas public directories, data broker sites, or search-oriented websites. Whether it is suitable for users in China depends on the websites covered by its scans, the applicability of POPIA, network accessibility, and supported payment methods, none of which are specified in the text. Therefore, its accessibility from China is unknown. Users in China who are focused on local personal information protection may also need to consider complaint channels under China’s Personal Information Protection Law, data breach monitoring services, or privacy compliance services as alternatives.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on digitaldetox.ltd official site.
digitaldetox.ltd is an South Africa Legal & Tax provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach digitaldetox.ltd directly.