Protecting Your Identity on the Internet - Part 1: Fighting Data Brokers - ITS Tactical (2024)

Protecting Your Identity on the Internet - Part 1: Fighting Data Brokers - ITS Tactical (1)

Imagine a file containing your name, address, political party, income, hobbies and favorite brand of soap. Sounds like the intro to a spy movie right? Wrong, this file is in the hands of plenty of private companies who are willing to sell it to the highest bidder. Data brokers, as they’re known, make a living selling your information to companies to develop targeted advertising and profile you as an individual.

Using computer sources and marketing data, processed data brokers are even able to determine if you’re going to be having a child soon. Besides invading personal privacy, this information helps hackers and those seeking to commit identity fraud. Hackers and fraudsters have purchased access or broken into data broker databases and then used the information for nefarious plots.

How to Fight Back

Regulations on consumer privacy in the USA allow you to opt out of data brokers to an extent. You can send an opt out request to a company to opt out of sharing most information with other companies. The most effective opt out requests are the ones sent to data broker companies themselves. While opting out will not delete the information, it will instruct the data broker to not share it with anyone else.

Opting Out

Let’s take control of our personal information and start opting out as many data brokers as we can. Most major data brokers have online opt out forms and others may need you to send in a letter or fax.

Datalogix

Protecting Your Identity on the Internet - Part 1: Fighting Data Brokers - ITS Tactical (2)

Datalogix is a data broker that focuses on online and direct mail. Notable users of Datalogix include Facebook, Ford, Google and Pepsico. Opting out of Datalogix can be completed by navigating to datalogix.com/privacy/, scrolling down to the “Choice” section and clicking on the third “click here” link and a small form will appear. Fill this out with your accurate personal information and click “Submit.”

DMAChoice

While DMAChoice is not a data broker itself, it represents almost 3,600 marketing companies that are all involved in sending you catalogs, magazine offers and credit offers. Opting out of the companies represented by DMAChoice can be done by using the DMAChoice account wizard found on dmachoice.org/register.php. Once you register and confirm your account, it’s as easy as logging in and clicking the “Go” button next to “Stop all unsolicited promotional mail.”

eBureau

Protecting Your Identity on the Internet - Part 1: Fighting Data Brokers - ITS Tactical (3)

eBureau is an “industry leading provider of predictive analytics” which is data broker speak for “We’re good at putting together pieces of your life and selling them.” To opt out of eBureau you can go to ebureau.com/privacy-center/opt-out and fill out the simple form on the right hand side of the webpage.

Epsilon

Epsilon Data Management provides email marketing making them quick to opt out of by only entering your email into their online form. Simply visit info.epsiloninteractive.com/p/WebSiteLeads/Epsilon_Opt-Out, drop in your email and you’ll be removed.

Experian

Experian handles email, telemarketing, direct mail and pre-approved credit offers making them one of the largest sources of data to opt out of. Experian’s opt out process is more difficult, involving both phone calls and emails. To start the process visit experian.com/privacy/opting_out.html and follow the links for opting out of the various services offered by Experian.

Intelius

While Intelius isn’t a traditional data broker, they provide the power of a traditional data broker to anyone who will pay, allowing anyone to get personal information with just a few clicks. Intelius’ opt out process uses an easy online form available at intelius.com/optout.phpbut requires a scanned copy of your ID to verify you are who you say you are.

If you opt out of the above mentioned data brokers, you’ll start to notice a change in the flow of junk mail, marketing emails, telemarketers and credit offers. With less credit offers arriving in the mail, you can sleep well at night knowing that nobody is rummaging through your mailbox to steal that pre-approved credit card. Opting out is a good start, but there are still plenty of other sources that have your personal information just a few clicks away. In the next part of this series, I’ll cover deleting yourself from various Person Lookup/People Search websites.

Editor-in-Chief’s Note:Please welcomeJack H. as a contributor on ITS Tactical. Jack is a self-proclaimed tactical paper hole punching expert and lead offensive cyber security engineer at Azorian Cyber Security in Denver, Colorado. When not breaking internet security, Jack spends his time taking apart and breaking various firearms.

Title Image © Josh Hallett

Protecting Your Identity on the Internet - Part 1: Fighting Data Brokers - ITS Tactical (2024)

FAQs

How can you protect yourself from a data broker? ›

For example, your date of birth is often used as an identifier or security question, so avoid posting it publicly. Consider making your social media accounts private, so only friends and family can see them. Avoid participating in online quizzes or entering online sweepstakes – these often capture data about you.

How do I remove my data from data brokers? ›

In short, to opt out of data brokers:
  1. Do an online search to narrow down the list of data brokers.
  2. Go to each broker's site and follow the opt-out process. Most involve filling out an opt-out form and clicking a confirmation link.
  3. Repeat the process—your data may end up on the data broker site again.

How do data brokers get your info? ›

Data brokers might nab personal information from the posts you've made or “liked” online, online quizzes you've taken, online sweepstakes you've entered, and the websites you've visited.

How much do data brokers make? ›

$36,000 is the 25th percentile. Salaries below this are outliers. $99,500 is the 75th percentile.

How data brokers sold my identity? ›

First-party data broker companies get your data directly from you when you use their products or services. Then they sell access to your data to third-party brokers who have no relation to you. Other data comes from public records, your purchasing history, online activity, and more.

What is one of the main problems with data brokers? ›

The data broker industry is sometimes criticized as creepy and Orwellian because it collects, packages and sells information about people to other companies and even the government. It's presented as an example of how our personal lives and tastes are for sale at a granular level.

Who are the biggest data brokers? ›

Major data brokers
Top 5 data broker companiesConsumer databaseAnnual revenue
Experian300+ million people$9.7 billion
Equifax220+ million people$5.1 billion
Epsilon250+ million people$2.9 billion
Acxiom260+ million people$2.7 billion
1 more row
Apr 22, 2024

Does data broker removal work? ›

Removing your personal information from data brokerages and people-finder sites might help protect you from identity thieves and other threats; however, it's not going to do much to protect you from malware. For that, you're going to need a rock-solid antivirus program.

Does Aura remove your info from data brokers? ›

Aura's automated service submits your data (email, name, address, phone number) to be removed from several data brokers. This is done frequently, to ensure if the data brokers somehow add back your information, we are constantly asking for them to remove it.

Is data brokering illegal? ›

At the Federal level, no law fully regulates businesses that collect and sell or share consumers' personal information. Certain laws touch on this type of market activity but they are sectoral or specific to certain uses (i.e., FCRA proscribes certain uses of credit reporting information).

Can you sue data brokers? ›

Getting inaccurate data removed from your credit report or background profile is also very difficult. The broker agencies are unlikely to make any changes based on a consumer's individual complaint. In many cases, it requires filing a lawsuit against a data broker to see any changes to your personal data.

How do data brokers endanger privacy? ›

Lack of Data security: Data brokers do not use proper measures to keep the personal data of individuals they collect secure. This could usher loss of sensitive data that could jeopardize individuals' data, leading to fraud or theft..

Who do data brokers sell to? ›

Data brokers usually sell aggregated data to: Other data brokers. Advertisers, who buy “market insights” to target potential customers. Political campaigns, who buy data to target their campaign messages.

What is an Internet data broker? ›

A data broker is an individual or company that specializes in collecting personal data (such as income, ethnicity, political beliefs, or geolocation data) or data about people, mostly from public records but sometimes sourced privately, and selling or licensing such information to third parties for a variety of uses.

How are grocery stores becoming data brokers? ›

In the past retailers would buy data from data brokers to get a better idea of consumer trends. Now, they're cutting out the middleman, collecting consumer data directly through things such as loyalty programs, location tracking, app usage, and even digital receipts.

How do I stop data guard broker? ›

Shut down the Oracle Data Guard broker.
  1. Issue the following DGMGRL command to disable the broker's active management of the databases in the Oracle Data Guard configuration: Copy. DGMGRL> DISABLE CONFIGURATION;
  2. Issue the following SQL*Plus statement to stop the broker: Copy. SQL> ALTER SYSTEM SET DG_BROKER_START=FALSE;

How can I protect myself from data tracking? ›

Top 12 Ways To Stop Being Tracked Online
  1. Use an anti-tracking browser.
  2. Use Tor Browser.
  3. Use an anti-tracking extension in your preferred browser.
  4. Use a private search engine.
  5. Clear private data when closing your browser.
  6. Use a VPN.
  7. Set your devices to “do not track”
  8. Stay private when it comes to public WiFis.

How do you regulate data brokers? ›

Congress must pass comprehensive privacy legislation and create a U.S. Data Protection Agency to regulate the out-of-control data broker industry.

Can you protect yourself from data breaches? ›

Protect yourself from a data breach

change your passwords regularly. review your bank account and credit card statements on a regular basis. make sure there are no unauthorized transactions. report any unauthorized transactions immediately.

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