Most privacy services do one thing: file opt-outs to pull your records off broker sites. GalaxyWarden works the whole exposure chain — breach and credential scanning and broker removal, mapped so you can see how they connect — and does it more efficiently, so we can pass value straight to you. Pick a comparison below for an honest, side-by-side look.
DeleteMe is a subscription service whose team — real people, not only bots — submits opt-out requests to remove your personal information from people-search and data-broker sites, then re-checks on a recurring (roughly quarterly) cadence and sends you a report.
Compare →Incogni (owned by Surfshark) is an automated data-removal subscription: it identifies data brokers and people-search sites likely to hold your information and sends opt-out requests for you, then re-sends fresh removal waves on a recurring cycle to catch relisted data.
Compare →Aura is an all-in-one identity-protection subscription. It bundles credit and dark-web monitoring, a VPN, antivirus, a password manager and identity-theft insurance, and includes automated data-broker removal (across a couple hundred sites, per Aura) as one part of the package.
Compare →OneRep is an automated data-removal subscription: it scans people-search and data-broker sites for listings that match you, files opt-out requests on your behalf, and re-checks monthly for reappearances. Coverage scales from its standard people-search list up to a larger Pro-tier broker list.
Compare →HIBP tells you an email appeared in a breach. GalaxyWarden turns that signal into action across the whole exposure chain, including broker removal.
Compare →Start with a free scan. See exactly what is exposed — leaked credentials and broker listings — then decide what to remove and how.