Indexeus describes itself as a “Data-Mining Search Engine,” focusing on account recovery, People Search, and consulting. It claims to have more than 350 million entries and to still be in beta. Users need to register an account before submitting searches, after which queries are processed through the Indexeus search engine and results are displayed. From a cybersecurity perspective, it is closer to a leaked-data/personal-information lookup and open-source intelligence aid than a defensive product such as EDR, WAF, vulnerability management, or zero trust.
In terms of protection capabilities, the text only indicates data-mining search, account recovery, people search, result filtering, and a “blacklisting option,” meaning a mechanism for requesting the removal of personal entries. It does not describe malware protection, intrusion detection, cloud security, API security, or automated response capabilities. Deployment is via website/SaaS access and requires account registration. Management and alerting features appear limited: the text only mentions account management, suspension/termination, and a Help desk, with no references to alerts, reports, auditing, team permissions, or a security operations dashboard.
The homepage says “TOTALLY FREE,” with unlimited searches and unlocked entries, which is its main selling point. However, the terms still include phrases such as “subscription fees” and “additional fee,” suggesting that fees may have existed historically or may apply in certain situations, but no plans, payment methods, or enterprise pricing are provided. No compliance certifications are disclosed, and there is no mention of GDPR, ISO 27001, SOC 2, or similar certifications. The service is provided in the EU and stores/processes personal information, but that is not the same as compliance certification. On integrations, there is no mention of an API, SIEM, SOAR, Webhooks, or bulk export capabilities.
Its strengths are a low barrier to entry, a currently advertised free model, a relatively large data scale, and a free blacklist removal request option, making it suitable for an initial check of personal exposure. The drawbacks are also clear: it does not explain data sources, accuracy, update frequency, or legal authorization; its terms emphasize that the service is provided as is, with no guarantee of uninterrupted operation, error-free performance, or safe content. In addition, the site mixes Indexeus’ historical services with Mod APK/tech blog content, so its positioning and credibility should be assessed carefully.
It is suitable for security researchers, individual users, or small teams investigating account-breach leads, searching for exposed personal information, and submitting removal requests. It is not suitable as a core enterprise security protection platform. The source text does not provide information about access from China, and network connectivity and payment methods are both unknown. For more mature alternatives, consider breach intelligence and threat intelligence services such as Have I Been Pwned, DeHashed, IntelX, SpyCloud, Recorded Future, or Flashpoint.
⚠ 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 indexeus.org official site.
indexeus.org is an Unknown Cybersecurity provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 4.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach indexeus.org directly.