In today’s evolving cyber threat landscape, businesses and individuals face increasing risks from cybercriminals operating on the deep and dark web. Securis360’s Deep and Dark Web Monitoring Services help organizations detect and respond to potential data breaches, stolen credentials, and other illicit activities, ensuring proactive protection against emerging threats.
With thousands of cyber threats lurking in the hidden corners of the internet, identifying stolen credentials, exposed sensitive data, or brand-related threats can be challenging. The anonymity of the dark web makes it a haven for cybercriminals trading in:
By continuously monitoring underground forums, file-sharing networks, encrypted chat channels, and dark web marketplaces, Securis360 provides early threat intelligence to safeguard your business.
Deep and Dark Web Monitoring refers to the continuous search, tracking, and analysis of hidden online spaces to detect leaked sensitive data, compromised credentials, and other security threats before they lead to cyber incidents.
Key Aspects of Deep and Dark Web Monitoring:
To protect sensitive corporate data, intellectual property, and financial assets from cybercriminals.
To detect fraudulent activities involving stolen banking credentials and financial information.
To track criminal activities, potential threats, and nation-state cyber operations.
To check if personal information, including Social Security numbers, passwords, and banking details, is being sold on the dark web.
Our team consists of industry veterans with hands-on experience in cybersecurity threat detection and mitigation.
We leverage state-of-the-art AI and machine learning to analyze massive volumes of dark web data efficiently.
Actionable insights tailored to your organization’s specific risk profile.
Around-the-clock surveillance ensures you receive real-time alerts about potential data breaches.
Stay ahead of attackers by leveraging our advanced digital risk protection services.
Cybercriminals are always searching for vulnerabilities to exploit. With Securis360’s proactive deep and dark web monitoring, you gain the intelligence needed to protect your business, employees, customers, and digital assets from evolving cyber threats.
Contact us today to learn how our Deep and Dark Web Monitoring Services can strengthen your organization’s cybersecurity posture and keep your critical information safe.
Deep Web Monitoring is the process of continuously monitoring hidden online sources, forums, databases, marketplaces, and underground communities for leaked credentials, sensitive data, cyber threats, and malicious activities targeting organizations.
Dark Web Monitoring identifies stolen data, compromised credentials, leaked information, and cybercriminal activities on dark web marketplaces and hidden networks.
The Deep Web includes non-indexed internet content such as private databases and internal systems, while the Dark Web refers to encrypted anonymous networks often used for hidden communications and cybercriminal activities.
Deep Web Monitoring helps organizations:
Organizations commonly using these services include:
The purpose is to detect and respond to threats involving stolen data, exposed credentials, cybercrime discussions, and targeted attacks.
Common monitored data includes:
Cybercriminals use anonymous networks to trade stolen data, sell malware, share attack methods, and coordinate cybercrime activities.
It helps organizations detect early warning signs and compromised data before attackers exploit them further.
Monitoring should ideally be continuous and available 24x7 for real-time threat visibility.
Credential leak monitoring detects exposed usernames, passwords, and login credentials leaked online or on underground forums.
Compromised credentials are usernames or passwords exposed through breaches, phishing attacks, or malware infections.
Attackers can use leaked credentials for:
Data breach monitoring tracks newly exposed databases, leaked information, and compromised records related to organizations.
Identity exposure monitoring identifies leaked employee, executive, or customer identities online.
Yes. Monitoring services commonly detect employee email and password exposures from breached platforms.
Account takeover prevention reduces risks of attackers accessing systems using stolen credentials.
Password exposure monitoring identifies leaked passwords associated with organizational domains and users.
Common sources include:
Yes. Early detection of compromised accounts and malicious campaigns helps reduce phishing-related risks.
Cyber threat intelligence collects and analyzes information about cyber threats, attacker behavior, vulnerabilities, and attack trends.
Underground forum monitoring tracks cybercriminal discussions involving organizations, leaked data, or planned attacks.
Ransomware monitoring identifies mentions of targeted organizations, leaked data, and ransomware group activities.
Brand monitoring detects fake domains, impersonation attempts, leaked information, and malicious use of company branding.
Domain monitoring identifies suspicious domain registrations similar to organizational websites used in phishing or fraud campaigns.
Malware intelligence monitoring tracks malware campaigns, stolen data logs, and threat actor activities.
Marketplace monitoring tracks illegal trading of stolen credentials, corporate data, malware, and access credentials.
Threat actor monitoring analyzes hacker groups, tactics, attack campaigns, and targeting activities.
IOC monitoring tracks malicious IPs, domains, file hashes, and attacker infrastructure linked to cyber threats.
Yes. Monitoring provides proactive visibility into external cyber threats affecting organizations.
It helps organizations identify exposed assets, leaked credentials, attacker discussions, and emerging cyber threats.
Incident response investigates and mitigates risks when compromised data or credentials are discovered online.
Ransomware leak monitoring tracks ransomware gang websites publishing stolen organizational data.
Executive monitoring identifies leaked executive credentials, impersonation attempts, and targeted attacks against leadership.
Third-party monitoring detects leaked information involving vendors, suppliers, and external service providers.
Yes. Monitoring services can detect exposed AWS, Azure, GCP, API keys, and cloud credentials.
API key monitoring detects leaked authentication keys and tokens exposed online.
Source code monitoring identifies exposed repositories, leaked code, and unauthorized code sharing activities.
Common tools include:
Yes. Monitoring helps detect leaked cloud credentials, exposed APIs, and compromised cloud assets.
Yes. Monitoring supports:
Organizations must demonstrate proactive monitoring and protection of sensitive data and digital assets.
Cyber risk exposure monitoring identifies external threats and exposed digital assets affecting organizational security posture.
Typical reports include:
Yes. Early threat detection helps organizations respond faster and reduce operational risks.
Increasing ransomware attacks, credential theft, and supply chain breaches make proactive monitoring critical.
Common risks include:
Major trends include:
Yes. Startups can identify leaked credentials and reduce cyber risks before attacks escalate.
Look for: