Choose Your Protection Level
Real-time Wikipedia monitoring powered by EventStreams. Alerts via email and browser notifications on every plan. Safety-net polling included.
Scout
Single Target Watch
$10/month
- ✓1 Wikipedia page
- ✓Real-time change detection
- ✓Safety-net polling (6 hours)
- ✓Alerts via email and browser notifications
- ✓Change history
- ✗Noise controls
- ✗Weekly digest
- ✗Analytics dashboard
- ✗Watchlist import
14-day money-back guarantee
Sentinel
Active Perimeter Guard
$19/month
- ✓3 Wikipedia pages
- ✓Real-time change detection
- ✓Safety-net polling (1 hour)
- ✓Alerts via email and browser notifications
- ✓Change history
- ✗Noise controls
- ✗Weekly digest
- ✗Analytics dashboard
- ✗Watchlist import
14-day money-back guarantee
Most Popular
Overwatch
Teams & Agencies
$99/month
- ✓Up to 50 monitored pages
- ✓Real-time change detection
- ✓Safety-net polling (30 minutes)
- ✓Noise controls (minimum change size)
- ✓Weekly digest
- ✓Analytics dashboard
- ✓Watchlist import
- ✓Slack/Discord webhooks (routed per client)
- ✓Client separation (organize pages by client)
- ✓Analytics + digest grouped by client
- ✓Priority support
Built for agencies managing multiple clients. Keep monitoring organized and reporting clear for stakeholders.
14-day money-back guarantee
Frequently Asked Questions
How does real-time detection work?
All plans use Wikipedia's official EventStreams — a live feed of every edit across all of Wikipedia. The moment someone edits a page you're monitoring, we detect it within seconds and send you an alert. Safety-net polling catches anything missed during brief interruptions.
What is the “safety-net polling” interval?
As a backup, our scheduler also polls your pages at the interval listed in your plan. This catches anything the real-time stream might miss during brief interruptions. In practice, nearly all changes are detected in real time.
Can I upgrade or downgrade anytime?
Yes! Use the Billing & Subscription option in your dashboard to manage your plan through our secure Stripe portal.
How is WikiGuard different from a Wikipedia watchlist?
Wikipedia watchlists are built for individual editors. WikiGuard is built for teams: it delivers email and browser alerts on every plan, with Slack/Discord routing per client on Overwatch—plus clear diffs and an audit trail.
Do I need a Wikipedia account?
No. WikiGuard monitors public Wikipedia pages and alerts you when they change.
Is WikiGuard an editing service?
No. WikiGuard is monitoring only. We don't edit Wikipedia pages or help manipulate articles.
What does “safety-net polling” mean?
WikiGuard listens for real-time edits via EventStreams, and also checks on a schedule during interruptions so you don't miss changes.
Which plans include Slack/Discord alerts?
Slack and Discord webhooks are available on Overwatch (Teams & Agencies).
How do Slack/Discord alerts work on Overwatch?
Overwatch routes Slack and Discord alerts per client. Assign a page to a client, set that client's webhook, and alerts go to the correct destination.
What happens if a page is Unassigned?
Unassigned pages still use global email and browser notifications. Slack/Discord alerts are sent only for pages assigned to a client to prevent cross-client routing mistakes.
14-day money-back guarantee
If WikiGuard isn't a fit, you can request a full refund within 14 days of your first subscription payment. Email us at [email protected] from your account email.