Socialprofiler helps you quickly and clearly understand who you're really dealing with online and offline. Whether you're dating someone new, hiring help at home, concerned about your kid's safety, or just curious—Socialprofiler gives instant insights.
SnoopReport
Hi Product Hunt, I’m Tony 👋
Five years ago we launched @SnoopReport here—while controversial, generally it seemed to be appreciated by the community.
Today we’re back with a new take on this classic problem. Socialprofiler instantly generates detailed interest profiles from public Facebook, Instagram, X, and TikTok profiles.
To generate a report, you just need a person’s first/last name & state, or their username.
Features:
Detailed insights into personal interests, beliefs, and values
Identification of potentially controversial or risky interests
Profile summaries covering politics, work background, locations, financial status, family, and even unusual aspects
So — I can already hear your concerns... I take them seriously!
What we’re offering really isn’t any different than Mark Zuckerberg’s Facebook newsfeed. The information we use is already public — we’re just collecting it and presenting it in an easy-to-use format.
For example, say I meet this guy Ryan Hoover at a hackathon and we want to explore founding something together. Wouldn't it be cool if I could see whether we have shared interests and might vibe?
Still not convinced? Let’s go deeper into this topic:
On behalf of the team, I’m super excited to invite the Product Hunt to try Socialprofiler, and I genuinely would love your feedback!
To give you a taste of what Socialprofiler can do, we’re giving everyone a free report for this week only when you sign up and use promo code PH. Try it on yourself (or someone you're curious about) right here:
https://socialprofiler.com/?promo=PH
Thanks
– Tony and the Socialprofiler Team
FYI: Currently available to U.S. customers only; more markets coming soon. We fully support user opt-outs and provide an easy form for this (subject to jurisdictional regulations).
@aenoskov How do you handle false positives from nickname matches?
Socialprofiler
@masump Thanks for a great question.
Socialprofiler is not an identity resolution service in the strict or legal sense. We don’t claim or guarantee that two profiles are the same person. Instead, we provide search optimization: helping users explore public social signals across platforms based on input parameters like name or state.
Our system is built to surface public content, respecting platform policies and individual privacy. Every result is probabilistic, not deterministic- and we don’t merge identities, we simply rank likely matches to aid discovery.
Think of it more like a smart search engine for public persona profiles.
At Socialprofiler, we use nickname mapping as just one of many signals in our discovery pipeline. A raw match like “Jon” = “Jonathan” is never enough to meaningfully boost a profile’s rank. We combine it with:
Contextual metadata (e.g., shared city, occupation, or education)
Posting patterns and time zones
Semantic content similarity
Graph-based co-occurrence
In short, we treat nickname overlap as a weak signal, and only act when it’s confirmed by multiple stronger signals.
This dramatically reduces false positives and optimize discovery search.
If our suggestion isn't accurate, you can refine the results by selecting the correct account from the search results or by entering the exact username in the username search field.
Definitely a bold one, but no denying the tech is powerful!! I feel like this is going to get a lot of attention...
The transparency around data use and the nod to ethics is appreciated, really feels like you’re tackling a complex space w/ eyes wide open.
Best of luck today!!
SnoopReport
@cranqnow Thanks so much! We spent nearly two years bringing this to life—lots of legal and ethical groundwork went into it as well. Appreciate the support!
Prejudging someone may sound like something unethical,
But we always need to find out more to make better decisions.
Congratulations :)
Socialprofiler
@pritraveler You’re absolutely right — it’s not about prejudging, but about being informed to make smarter, fairer decisions.