Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
ONOsendai is a privacy and counter-surveillance resource website built around the theme of “you are being watched.” The collected content mainly explains how governments, companies, and advertising networks collect online activity and metadata, and references external privacy guides from EFF, Privacy International, Security-In-A-Box, and others. It also lists tools by category, including Bitwarden, KeePass, Proton, Tuta, Signal, Session, SimpleX, Obsidian, and DuckDuckGo. Overall, it is closer to a privacy education and tool directory site than a typical SaaS or enterprise software product.
From an enterprise software perspective, ONOsendai’s “feature modules” are mainly static content: privacy risk education, metadata explanations, security tool lists, terms of service, and a privacy policy. The text does not show an account system, dashboard, workflows, team spaces, permission management, audit logs, or an admin console, nor does it describe any third-party integration capabilities. Its third-party content mainly consists of external links and tool recommendations, rather than API integrations or automated connections.
The pages do not show any paid plans, enterprise editions, subscription pricing, trial periods, or payment methods. Its public content appears to be freely accessible, but this is not enough to determine whether any hidden commercial services exist. Deployment is also not explained; the only thing that can be confirmed is that it provides information through a public website, with no disclosed cloud SaaS console or self-hosted version.
The privacy policy states that the site does not use cookies, may collect personal account details voluntarily provided by users, and uses them for internal records. It also states that personal information will not be sold, distributed, or rented unless required by law. Its terms are governed by the laws of Frankfurt - Darmstadt, Germany, and it provides [email protected] as a contact address. However, the text does not disclose common enterprise procurement materials such as GDPR details, a DPA, data retention periods, encryption measures, ISO 27001, SOC 2, or penetration testing information.
Its strengths are a clear theme and strong value for privacy awareness education, especially for understanding metadata risks. The tool categorization also makes it easy for individuals to quickly learn about the privacy software ecosystem. Its weaknesses are its low level of productization and the lack of enterprise-grade features, support systems, service levels, integrations, and APIs, making it difficult to treat as an enterprise SaaS procurement option. It is better suited to individual users, supplementary material for security awareness training, privacy advocates, or security teams looking for an introductory reference.
The collected text does not provide information about access from mainland China, network nodes, or payment, so its accessibility from China is unknown. Some of the external services it recommends may have unstable access or inconvenient payment options in mainland China, but that does not necessarily reflect the status of the ONOsendai website itself. Alternative references include Privacy Guides, EFF Surveillance Self-Defense, PrivacyTools, and Security-In-A-Box. If an organization needs practical training implementation, it should consider an enterprise knowledge base, a security awareness training platform, or a compliance training system.
⚠ 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 onosendai.eu official site.
onosendai.eu is an EU SaaS 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 onosendai.eu directly.