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Part 10: Anatomy of a DoxxScore Risk Report

Quick note for those who've been following along: you may notice we've rebranded to DoxxScore. We discovered a product using the same name and made the call to change early rather than later. Same product, same mission, better name fit, TBH. Onward.

The DoxxScore report is the core deliverable. It's what people pay for and what they'll refer back to. So we spent a lot of time getting it right.

Here's how it's structured:

At the top: your overall risk score (0–100) with a clear risk tier — Low, Moderate, High, or Critical. No ambiguity.

Next: a breakdown by category. We assess exposure across multiple dimensions, including public records, data broker presence, social media, data breaches, and more. Each category gets its own sub-score so you can see exactly where your vulnerabilities are.

Then: the findings. Specific, factual statements about what we found. Not vague warnings, including concrete data points.

Finally: your action plan. Prioritized steps ranked by impact. The things that will move the needle most are at the top. Each step includes instructions on how to do it.

The whole thing is designed to be useful on day one. Print it out, work through the action plan, and your exposure starts shrinking.

That's the goal:

a document you actually use, not one you glance at and file away.

Part 9: Who DoxxScore Is For (and Who It's Not)

A question I keep getting is "Who needs a doxxing risk assessment?"

The honest answer? More people than you'd think.

DoxxScore was built for:

Apr 9
at
11:19 AM
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