
The scam takedown market is growing up fast, but most buyers are still asking the wrong question
If you work in phishing, fraud ops, brand protection, or scam response in Australia, the market feels different now. Not because scam pages suddenly became easier to remove. They did not. It feels different because takedown is no longer a niche clean-up task . It is becoming part of how organisations are expected to show they can turn scam intelligence into action. That is a big shift. It changes what “good” looks like. It also exposes how shallow a lot of takedown programs still are. Most buyers still ask: “Who can take down a phishing site?” That is not the right question anymore. The better question is: “Who can reduce attacker operating time across the channels Australians actually get hit through?” That difference sounds subtle. It is not. It is the difference between a vendor that files abuse tickets and a vendor that can materially compress the life of a campaign. The environment has changed Australia now has a harder anti-scam policy baseline than it did even a year ago. The Sc
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