Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Myne Global positions itself as a “virtual safe deposit box” and registry platform for valuables. Users can register watches, jewelry, art, electronics, pets, and even crypto assets and NFTs in its database for inventory management, ownership transfers, theft/loss reporting, and history lookups. In the cybersecurity category, it is not a firewall, EDR, or identity security product; it is closer to an asset information security, anti-theft collaboration, and digital proof-of-ownership management service.
The platform provides a Dashboard for managing inventory, transferring post-sale ownership, reporting lost or stolen items to the police or insurance companies, requesting a History Report, and importing lists of valuables or recent purchases. The History Report covers information such as ownership history, repair records, and item status. Its stolen-property database search can help second-hand buyers avoid purchasing items with suspicious origins. The text also mentions Child ID, which is intended to provide identity information in missing-child scenarios.
Deployment is via a website/online service. The main text also mentions reporting lost pets through an app, but does not provide iOS/Android details. Its proposed ecosystem includes law enforcement agencies, insurance companies, auction houses, dealers, pawn shops, and art-market participants contributing to or querying the data. However, the text does not disclose API, Webhook, SSO, or SIEM integrations, nor does it show compliance certifications such as ISO 27001, SOC 2, or PCI DSS. For a platform that stores information about high-value assets, the lack of detail around encryption, access controls, audit logs, backups, and data retention policies is an important uncertainty when evaluating it.
Pricing is public: registration cards range from 1 card for $5 to 25 cards for $60; a History Report costs $25; stolen-database searches start at $2 per search. Both Standard and Corporate subscriptions require a minimum 3-month purchase. The corporate plan is priced by the number of “unique machines,” ranging from $1,000 for 1 machine to $25,000 for 50 machines. Its refund policy is very strict: all services are non-refundable, including setup fees, storage fees, search fees, report fees, and monthly fees.
The main advantage is a clear functional workflow covering registration, reporting, lookup, and transfer, making it suitable for individuals, collectors, second-hand market participants, and related organizations that care about proof-of-ownership management for valuables. The drawbacks are that the platform’s value depends heavily on database scale, participation by law enforcement and merchants, and data accuracy, while the text provides no actual coverage metrics. Security and compliance information is also insufficient. Availability from China, payment support, and integration with local law enforcement or insurance workflows are unknown. Chinese users who mainly want to use it for local claims or lost-property recovery should first confirm accessibility, payment methods, cross-border data handling, and recognition by local institutions, and may also compare it with insurers’ property inventory tools, local second-hand authentication services, or public security lost-and-found channels.
⚠ 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 myneglobal.com official site.
myneglobal.com is an Unknown Insurance provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach myneglobal.com directly.