The monitoring infrastructure the desk operates is private. It is not a service the desk markets to other firms, not a platform offered under licence, not a product packaged for general use. It exists to do the work the desk does for its clients, and it does not exist for anything else.

This is a deliberate choice. A platform that is offered widely is constrained by what its widest user can be permitted to do. The instruments must be made safe for the careless; the data must be made fit for purposes the platform's operator does not control; the monitoring must default to coverage that does not embarrass the platform when used badly. A platform built for the public ceases, by that fact, to be built for the private.

The desk's instruments are built for the desk's work. They reach into sources that would be inappropriate to make generally available. They run queries that would not be permissible at general scale. They produce outputs calibrated to a small number of clients whose circumstances justify the access. Keeping the infrastructure private is what makes the work possible.

This is not a posture about exclusivity. It is the practical answer to how this kind of monitoring is done well. A bespoke instrument, run by people who understand the matter, will reach where a general one cannot.