About Us

SonderSec is a nonprofit cybersecurity initiative focused on protecting communities that are too often left out of digital safety conversations.

We deliver trauma-informed, culturally aware training programs that teach seniors, caregivers, and underserved populations how to spot scams, defend their data, and reclaim control of their online experience.

We don’t just raise awareness. We build recognition.

Because recognizing a threat—financial, emotional, or digital—is the first step in protecting yourself from it.

Our workshops are built from real-world threats, not hypotheticals.

We teach what actually happens:

  • Social Security + Medicare scams
  • Fake tech support
  • Romance fraud
  • Identity theft targeting low-income populations


We meet people where they are—without condescension, fear tactics, or digital gatekeeping.

SonderSec is structured as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit and actively developing scalable, accessible tools for long-term community impact. Our training models are designed to adapt—not expire.

They say that nothing worth doing is easy. Like every successful business, we’ve had our bumps in the road. But we wouldn’t change a thing. Why? Because throughout our journey we’ve honed our skills and put our services to the test in the real world, so our clients can benefit from our years of experience.

Our Project

SonderSec is more than awareness—it’s a direct response to the growing gap between digital threats and digital literacy.

Our project is simple:
Equip the most vulnerable with the tools to defend themselves online.

We focus on:

  • Scam detection and prevention for seniors and caregivers
  • Real-world training based on active threats (not outdated advice)
  • Clear, accessible language—no jargon, no shame
  • Trauma-aware teaching that respects lived experience

We offer free or grant-supported cybersecurity workshops to senior centers, community spaces, and support networks across the U.S. and UK.

This isn’t a startup.
This isn’t an app.
This is real education for people who’ve been left out of the conversation.

m always working on something. Most of the time, it's getting results for my clients. But sometimes, it's a personal project that lets me explore new concepts and ideas.