For years, professional abusers operating across the CFD and FX industry have relied on a straightforward strategy: get caught at one broker, move to the next, and start again with a clean record. The surveillance infrastructure protecting brokers was largely siloed. Each firm monitored its own environment, and what happened at a competitor remained invisible. Abuse became portable as a result, with organized trading operations cycling through brokers systematically, extracting value at each stop before detection caught up. The median time for a broker to identify and close down a known abuser arriving from another firm was ten and a half months. By then, the damage was done and the trader had already moved on.Tapaas approaches this as a structural problem rather than an individual compliance failure, and the solution it has built reflects that framing.A network, not a dashboardThe platform's collaborative intelligence database works by aggregating abuse intelligence across a broad network of participating brokers rather than analyzing suspicious activity inside a single environment. When an abusive trading pattern is identified at one firm, the associated behavioral and technical fingerprint enters a shared reference layer. Every other broker in the network checks incoming accounts against that layer in real time.The fingerprint travels with the trader, not with the broker account. A trader who changes their name, country, or device still carries identifiable attributes: device IDs, IP structures, network identifiers, CTrader IDs, account clustering behavior, timing patterns, and historical abuse markers. Tapaas runs a vector match across all of them simultaneously, and as soon as a sufficient confidence threshold is reached, the account is labeled and surfaced inside the broker's operational environment.For brokers sharing richer onboarding data including names, emails, and phone numbers, known abusers can be identified before they make their first deposit. For others, the system monitors live behavioral signals throughout registration and trading activity, flagging accounts as matching data accumulates. The earlier a professional abuser is caught, the greater the savings - bonuses, PSP fees, IB rebates, affiliate CPAs, and referral bonuses are often paid out before the actual toxic behaviour takes place.The timeline of detection compresses either way significantly. The platform currently captures hundreds of thousands of abusive accounts per month across its network while analyzing tens of trillions in monthly trading volume. In the highly volatile past two months, some regional symbols have seen more than 20% of all trades come from professional abusers - including Gold in China and WTI in Western Europe.What gets flaggedThe surveillance layer covers the full spectrum of professional abuse rather than a narrow set of predefined patterns. Tapaas monitors more than 80 alert types across two core areas: real-time exposure management and trader surveillance.On the exposure side, the platform tracks hedging signals, Value at Risk thresholds, anomalous market movements, pricing feed irregularities, and technical infrastructure issues. On the surveillance side, the system scans simultaneously for scalping patterns, end-of-session negative balance protection abuse, coordinated cohort trading, server farm behavior, latency exploitation, and cross-broker position strategies designed to exploit asymmetric payoffs.The breadth matters because professional abusers rarely operate through a single method. Monitoring dozens of behavioral vectors in parallel means an account caught through one signal is assessed across all others at the same time.The commercial caseThe operational impact is measurable if deliberately stated at conservative levels. At the most conservative matching settings, clients are identifying over $1 million per month in savings tied to abusive activity mitigation. At the tightest settings, most brokers discover that 0.5% to 1% of their active base carries a flag from elsewhere in the network, identified as frontrunners or scalpers at another participating firm. The flags are assigned by Tapaas rather than by individual brokers, which ensures a consistent standard across every environment in the network. Under broader deployment configurations, Tapaas estimates that figure could reach $10 million per month from Stage 1 alone, with subsequent stages expected to deliver multiples of those numbers as network participation grows.Across the first 12 months using the platform, the median broker sees a 55-60% increase in profit per million. That improvement is driven by real-time alerts enabling more precise hedging decisions and by the removal of toxic flow that distorts risk exposure and suppresses profitability.The underlying principle resembles threat intelligence sharing in cybersecurity: one firm identifying malicious behavior creates protective value for the wider ecosystem. In the CFD and FX space, that kind of collaborative infrastructure has historically been fragmented or absent entirely. Tapaas functions as the connective layer between brokers rather than simply another internal risk tool.Built for dealing desksThe platform was developed by a technical team with institutional roots, applying the same database infrastructure used by tier-one banks and major hedge funds for price-making and risk analytics. With approximately 25% market share in its segment and no competitor operating at a comparable scale or data depth, Tapaas occupies a position in the market it describes as the only true real-time risk management platform of its kind.Clients describe the operational shift in direct terms. Angus Walker of IC Markets puts it plainly: it is not possible to rely on information that is a few minutes old. With Tapaas, dealing teams can know the exact position of the company, its clients, and its counterparties to the second. Aris Christofi of CFI calls it the best risk management software by a significant margin, pointing specifically to the depth and accessibility of the data and the measurable improvement in risk team efficiency.The platform integrates directly with broker CRM environments and trading infrastructure, delivering alerts through Slack, email, or WhatsApp and updating dashboards within 10 seconds of trade placement. Dealing teams act on the output according to their own internal policies and thresholds.The sector-wide shiftThe collaborative database was not introduced unilaterally. It was requested by clients, and every broker participating in the cross-network layer has opted in. The intelligence being shared reflects active industry consensus around a shared problem, which changes the nature of what the platform represents.Professional abusers have relied on broker fragmentation as a structural feature of the market, one that has historically worked in their favor. Each firm they targeted had no visibility into what happened elsewhere, and that invisibility was the operational foundation of the abuse model. The Tapaas network closes that gap incrementally, with the intelligence becoming more valuable as participation grows.For dealing desks and risk teams managing increasingly sophisticated abuse patterns across global client bases, sector-wide surveillance is no longer theoretical. It is becoming the operational baseline.Tapaas will be present at Booth 30 in iFX EXPO INTERNATIONAL 2026. To connect with the team or learn more about the platform, visit tapaas.com.This article was written by FM Contributors at www.financemagnates.com.