Google retires free dark web monitoring tool next year

Google will discontinue its free dark web monitoring tool early next year, ending notifications about personal data leaks. The service, which alerts users to appearances of their name, email, or phone number on the dark web, will stop monitoring new results on January 15, 2026. Access to existing reports will be removed on February 16, 2026.

Google announced it is shutting down its free dark web monitoring tool, which had been available to all users since mid-2024. Previously exclusive to Google One subscribers, the tool notifies individuals when their personal information—such as name, email address, or phone number—appears on the dark web, often due to data breaches. Users can view a list of hits tied to specific breaches on their Google account.

In an email to users, Google stated that feedback indicated the reports "did not provide helpful next steps." While the service identifies leaks, it offers no guidance on remedial actions. Instead, the company plans to prioritize tools that deliver clear, actionable advice.

The discontinuation begins with a halt to new monitoring on January 15, 2026, followed by the removal of report access from accounts on February 16, 2026. Users wishing to delete their monitoring profile immediately can do so via the "results with your info" section on the tool's official page.

This move reflects Google's shift toward more practical cybersecurity features amid growing concerns over data privacy. The dark web tool, once a key perk, underscores the challenges in providing effective post-breach support without comprehensive remediation options.

Related Articles

Illustration of a person checking their phone for a spoofed call warning on Android, highlighting Google's new deepfake detection feature.
Image generated by AI

Google adds detection for spoofed calls to Android phones

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

Google is rolling out a new feature to Android devices that detects impersonation scams involving spoofed calls. The update targets the rising threat of AI-generated deepfake voices in financial fraud. It begins deploying this month on phones running Android 12 and higher.

Google has raised alarms over upcoming European Union regulations that would require it to share search data and open Android AI access to competitors.

Reported by AI

A report by the Génération Libre think tank links rising data breaches in France to European regulations. The CNIL is tightening controls after a record year in 2025.

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline