A compliance startup called Delve is facing serious accusations of lying to customers about their privacy protection. An anonymous whistleblower claims the company falsely told hundreds of businesses they were following privacy and security rules when they weren’t.
This is a big deal because companies pay good money to stay on the right side of privacy laws. Getting it wrong can mean huge fines and angry customers who trusted you with their personal information.
The Trust Problem
Delve sells itself as a company that helps other businesses follow complicated privacy regulations. Think of them as the middleman who’s supposed to make sure your favorite shopping app or banking service is properly protecting your data.
But according to a detailed post published anonymously on Substack, Delve was essentially selling fake peace of mind. The whistleblower alleges the startup told clients they were compliant with important regulations when the actual work to protect customer data hadn’t been done properly.
The accusations come at a time when privacy violations are making headlines and costing companies millions in penalties. Just last year, major tech companies paid massive fines for mishandling user information.
What Happens Next
Delve hasn’t publicly responded to these allegations yet. If the claims turn out to be true, the company’s customers could face their own compliance problems down the road.
For regular people, this serves as another reminder that the companies handling your personal information might not be as careful as they claim to be.

