Business Dispute

When a partnership ends, the shared access rarely ends with it.

Whether you're preparing to separate or you've realised a former partner is still inside the accounts, we close the files, email, and channels that years of trust left open — in person, in a single day, before they cost you the negotiation.

In person only · No remote access · No cloud · No logs · No app

What's exposed when partners split

It isn't sabotage. It's access that was never revisited.

In most partnerships access is granted in trust, built up over years, and never revoked — until someone leaves and you learn what "shared" really meant.

  • Shared channels — a WhatsApp group, a Slack, a vendor thread the departing partner was never removed from.
  • Shared stores — a Drive folder, a Dropbox link, a company account whose password was practical to share and never changed.
  • The accounts that run the business — a personal Gmail the company was built on; an admin login only one person ever managed.

None of it requires breaking in. It only requires that no one closed the door on the way out.

How it actually happens

The group nobody cleaned

Three partners had run the same business WhatsApp group for three years — vendors, logistics, pricing, the daily weather of the company. When one of them left, there was a handshake, a settlement, and a hundred other things to deal with; nobody thought about the group. Two months later a new supplier negotiation opened in it. He was still there, silent, reading every message as the margins were discussed in real time. By the time anyone noticed the extra name, he had already called the supplier himself.

The account that ran the business

The company had started, as they often do, on one partner's personal Gmail — both of them knew the password, because at the beginning that was simply easier. Four years later the dispute began, and the password had still never been changed; there had never been a reason. While the lawyers exchanged letters, the departing partner was reading four years of correspondence: every client, every vendor, every message the company's own attorney had sent about the split itself.

What we do

We map every shared door and close it — in a day, with you present.

We map the devices, accounts, channels, and shared stores tied to the business and your role — and, where it matters, how exposure is happening now. Then everything is hardened in your presence: members removed, links revoked, admin recovered, passwords rotated, a physical security key issued so accounts hold even if a password is already known.

You leave with a signed Certificate of Hardening for your file.

Working with commercial counsel? The Certificate documents your security posture for the matter. How we work with attorneys →

Protection

Most single-principal cases are covered by Personal Shield (₪15,000); where leadership, a core team, or company systems are involved, higher tiers apply. A Threat Assessment is ₪3,500, credited in full toward any protection tier within 14 days.

See the four protection tiers →

Questions
Can you get back into accounts they took, or recover what they copied?

No. The work is defensive — we secure what's yours and close their access. We never enter anyone else's systems.

I think a former partner is still reading our messages. Now what?

We close the access immediately and check what's currently reaching the business, so it stops here.

Can this be done before I move to dissolve the partnership?

Yes — and it's the strongest position. The earlier access is closed, the less there is to use.

Will they know?

Removing a member or rotating a password reads as ordinary account hygiene.