Spysera
If you need to find public information about an email or username, use these legal, transparent tools:
| Tool | Purpose | Cost | Ethics | |------|---------|------|--------| | Epieos | Email/phone to profile links | Free + paid | Fully transparent, no breach data | | WhatsMyName | Username enumeration | Free | Open source, community maintained | | Holmes | Username search across 250+ sites | Free | OSINT framework, no storage | | DeHashed | Breach lookup (opt-in for companies) | Paid | Legitimate breach notification service | | Social Search (Bellingcat) | Username → social media | Free | Journalistic, non-commercial |
For phone number lookup (public records only): spysera
Never use a service that offers “reverse password lookup” – that is always illegal and malicious.
We tested SpySerA against three known spyware samples in a controlled virtual environment: If you need to find public information about
Verdict: SpySerA is remarkably effective against unknown, advanced persistent threats (APTs). For everyday adware, it's overkill.
Leaked credential dumps (often from torrents or dark web forums) were ingested into SpySerra’s database. This allowed email → password lookup — a major ethical red line. Never use a service that offers “reverse password
Luxury brands and software companies deploy SpySerA to hunt for counterfeit listings or cracked software licenses. The platform’s image search API can find altered logos on illegitimate e-commerce sites that traditional brand monitors miss.
An investigative piece could examine whether Spysera:
SpySerA acts as a smart firewall specifically for outbound data. Even if spyware is successfully installed, SpySerA will block any data packets that contain specific patterns (e.g., keystrokes, geolocation coordinates, or contact lists) from leaving your device unless you explicitly allow it.