Private Customers — Security Review
Privacy & Security Audit
A clear-eyed review of your home network's Wi-Fi and security configuration — identifying unnecessary exposure, weak credentials, and insecure default settings. Practical recommendations, no fear-based messaging.
What This Service Addresses
Home routers and Wi-Fi equipment are frequently left in insecure default configurations. Admin passwords unchanged. Remote management enabled. Guest networks missing. Firewall settings at factory defaults. A privacy and security audit reviews the actual configuration and identifies the specific gaps — without exaggerating risk or recommending replacements that are not necessary.
Review Scope
- Wi-Fi security configuration (encryption, password strength, hidden SSIDs)
- Router admin access review (password, remote access, management interface exposure)
- Firewall and port forwarding review
- DNS configuration and privacy assessment
- Connected device inventory and risk assessment
- Review of any cloud-connected devices and their data practices
What You Receive
- Audit report with findings classified by severity
- Specific, actionable recommendations
- Prioritised by risk — not by upsell opportunity
- Implementation guidance or assistance implementing recommendations
Typical Situations
- Recently moved into a new home and unsure what the previous occupants configured
- Connected many smart home devices and want to understand the risk
- Concerned about privacy after reading about router vulnerabilities
- Preparing for an insurance or data protection review
"Most home network security problems are not exotic — they are default settings left unchanged."
Frequently Asked Questions
What does the audit cover?
Your home network configuration, connected devices and their security settings, DNS and traffic routing, remote access methods in use, and any data storage devices such as NAS or external drives. The aim is to identify exposure points that most home users are unaware of.
Is this relevant for individuals, or just home offices?
Both. The audit is relevant for anyone who values privacy and wants to understand their actual exposure. It is particularly useful for people with smart home devices, children on the network, or those who work with sensitive personal or professional data.
Will you have access to my personal data?
No. The audit examines network configuration and device security settings — not the content of your files or communications. Access is limited to router administration interfaces and device settings pages.
What is the output?
A plain-language report covering what was found, why it matters, and what to do about it. Technical findings are explained in terms of practical impact — not just CVE numbers and port states.