Global Intelligence Scoreboard
Your Overall Score
Nine weighted dimension scores combined into one global verdict — calculated live from your full scan.
Understanding Every Signal
How each dimension score is derived and why it carries its specific weight.
Dimension Scores & Weights
Security Score — 20% weight
The heaviest-weighted dimension. Security issues directly affect real-world exposure regardless of how good every other dimension looks — a WebRTC leak through a VPN, open camera permission on a hostile page, or missing HTTPS each have immediate consequences. Derived from Canvas 7's full security analysis.
Network Score — 12% weight
Reflects routing quality, network tier, and ASN health from Canvas 1. A residential Tier 2 connection on a reputable ISP scores well; a connection routing through a flagged datacenter ASN scores lower regardless of speed.
Privacy Score — 12% weight
Derived from Canvas 3's VPN/proxy trust score combined with Canvas 7's privacy-specific signals. Reflects how much of the connection and device fingerprint is exposed versus masked.
Performance Score — 12% weight
Derived from Canvas 9's page load and resource timing data. Reflects real loading experience on this device and connection, not a synthetic benchmark.
Device, Graphics, Capability & Speed Scores — 10% each
Device (Canvas 5), graphics (Canvas 6), capability (Canvas 8), and rendering speed (Canvas 10) each contribute equally. These four together characterise the hardware and browser platform — high scores indicate a capable, modern environment.
Identity Score — 8% weight
The lowest-weighted dimension, derived from Canvas 2's network identity data. IP geolocation accuracy and ISP consistency are useful signals, but they contribute least to overall environment quality since they're the dimension users have the most natural variation in through normal ISP differences.
Summary Fields
Strongest Area, Weakest Area & Improvement Priority
Strongest and weakest areas identify which of the nine dimensions scored highest and lowest in this scan. Improvement priority is a plain-English recommendation derived from the weakest scoring dimension that is also one where user action can actually help — a low identity score due to ISP infrastructure doesn't generate an improvement priority, but a low security score due to open WebRTC does.
Critical Flags & Warnings
Critical flags are high-severity findings that directly lower the global score significantly — things like a WebRTC IP leak, TOR exit node detection, or a critically low security score. Warnings are lower-severity signals that reduce the score less but still warrant attention.
What the Global Score Is and Isn't
It's an environment quality score, not a personal rating
The global score measures the quality of the device and connection environment — not the person using it. A 55/100 on a corporate network behind a VPN reflects the network configuration, not the user's technical sophistication. A 90/100 on a home broadband connection reflects a clean, well-configured browser on a healthy network, which can be completely unintentional.
Security is the only dimension where deliberate action consistently moves the score
Performance, device, and network scores are largely determined by hardware and ISP. Security score is the dimension where specific, actionable changes — disabling WebRTC, revoking unused permissions, ensuring HTTPS — translate directly and immediately into a measurably higher score on the next scan.