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Your Personal Data Is Exposed Online

Here’s how to wipe it before scammers use it.

Presented by Incogni Inc September 10, 2025

Type your name into Google. Chances are, you’ll see more than just your social media profiles. Old addresses, phone numbers, and even relatives’ names may appear on websites you’ve never heard of. Now imagine scammers, telemarketers, or identity thieves having access to all that data with just a few clicks.

This isn’t a rare problem, it’s the reality for billions of people worldwide. According to the Identity Theft Resource Center’s 2024 Annual Data Breach Report, more than 1.7 billion individuals had their personal data compromised in 2024, a staggering 312% increase from the previous year (HIPAA Journal). From scammers targeting grieving families through obituaries, to criminals buying stolen phone numbers on the dark web, the risks are real and they are only growing.

The internet is not one central database you can control. It is a messy web of data brokers, people-search sites, and public records that constantly collect and resell your information. Even if you manage to delete your details from one site, another may quietly add them back. That is why removing your personal information is not a one-time task; it requires persistence, monitoring, and the right tools.

Introducing Incogni

Incogni is the service that lets you disappear from the internet without spending dozens of hours on tedious opt-outs. Instead of hunting down every website that lists your name or address, Incogni contacts hundreds of data brokers and people-search sites on your behalf and keeps following up when they try to re-list you.

When you sign up, you provide a small set of personal identifiers: your name, up to three email addresses, up to three phone numbers, and up to three physical addresses. Using this, Incogni pinpoints the data brokers most likely holding your information and sends legally binding removal requests under privacy laws such as GDPR and CCPA. These laws require companies to respond, and Incogni manages that response cycle for you.

If you try to do this yourself, you quickly discover how fragmented and frustrating it is. One site wants a scanned ID, another insists on a faxed form, and a third accepts requests only during certain hours. You send emails, wait weeks, and then find your profile is back because the site refreshed its database. Most people abandon the effort somewhere in the middle. Incogni solves this by turning a scattered, manual grind into a managed, ongoing process that runs in the background while you get on with your life.

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The real advantage of Incogni is that it does not just send these requests once and stop. Many brokers re-list your data after a period of time, so Incogni monitors their databases and reissues removal requests as necessary. This ongoing process helps ensure that your details stay off the market for as long as you have an active subscription. Think of it as a privacy maintenance plan that keeps working month after month.

You also get access to a clean, easy-to-read dashboard where you can track exactly what is happening. You will see which brokers are being contacted, the type of data they have about you, how many requests have been sent, and how many have been completed. This level of transparency makes it easy to understand the value you are getting, and it gives you evidence you can keep for records or compliance needs.

Why Personal Information Matters

Personal information is not just your name and address. It is the blueprint of your identity. When combined, these details create a profile that can be exploited by marketers, scammers, and fraudsters. A phone number can be used to bypass SMS authentication, an address can enable harassment or doxxing, and a combination of birth date and past addresses can be enough to open new accounts or answer “security” questions.

Consider a few common scenarios. A criminal pairs your leaked email with data from a people-search site and sends a convincing phishing message that includes your old street name to build trust. A harasser uses a reverse phone lookup to find your relatives and contacts them directly. A burglar checks public property databases and social media posts to guess when a home is likely empty. These are not edge cases. They are everyday methods that rely on the same exposed data you can find about yourself in a simple search.

Once your details are in circulation, you do not control where they go. A single breach at a data broker can mean your entire profile, including sensitive information, ends up for sale on the dark web. According to IBM’s 2023 Cost of a Data Breach Report, the average global cost of a data breach hit $4.45 million, which shows how valuable and dangerous exposed personal data can be for both individuals and organisations.

In summary, your personal information can include:

  • Full name, address, phone numbers, and email addresses
  • Date of birth and national identification numbers
  • Property ownership and voter registration records
  • Employment, education, and financial history
  • Medical details, online shopping habits, and browsing history
  • Social media activity, geotagged locations, and photos

How Personal Information Gets Online

Your information does not appear online by accident. It is pushed there, often without your knowledge. Public records are routinely indexed and republished by private sites. Data brokers purchase and combine large sets of information and then resell it to advertisers, insurers, recruiters, and anyone else with a budget. People-search websites take the most sensitive parts of these databases and make them searchable by name. Social platforms and apps often collect more data than they strictly need, and they store it far longer than you expect.

  • Public records – Property ownership, business filings, and court cases are routinely published online.
  • Data brokers – Entire companies exist to buy, combine, and sell personal data to advertisers, insurers, or recruiters.
  • People-search websites – Sites like Whitepages and Spokeo make your details searchable by anyone, no questions asked.
  • Social media – A single geotagged photo can reveal your exact location.
  • Apps and online services – Many apps collect far more data than they need and store it indefinitely.

Common sources of exposure include:

  • Government and legal databases that are publicly accessible
  • Subscription services, contests, and online surveys
  • Old accounts you no longer use but never deleted
  • Third-party cookies and trackers gathering browsing data
  • Leaked data from previous security breaches

Every one of these channels is a risk. Everyone is also a target for a removal request. The difference between a one-off cleanup and a lasting result is whether those requests are maintained over time.

How to Remove Personal Information from the Internet

Here is the reality. You can remove your data manually, but it is slow and frustrating. Or you can let a dedicated service make it vanish while you get on with your life. The steps below show the manual path so you understand what Incogni replaces.

1: Identify Where Your Information is Listed

Start by searching for your name alongside your address, phone number, or email. What you often find is unsettling. Data broker sites with your personal profile, relatives’ names, past addresses, and sometimes even satellite images near your home. Build a simple list of the sites you find. If you have time, capture a screenshot and the page URL, since some sites change layout or remove pages once they detect repeat visits. This inventory becomes your checklist.

2: Remove Information from People-Search Sites

Every site has its own removal process, and some deliberately make it complex to discourage you. One may have a hidden opt-out link in a footer, another may require a phone call during business hours, another may ask you to upload a driver’s license. It is not uncommon to wait two or three weeks for confirmation. Even then, your profile can reappear after a database refresh.

This is where Incogni shines. Instead of fighting each website one at a time, it sends bulk removal requests across hundreds of people-search sites, tracks the responses, and follows up when they try to re-add you. It is the difference between trying to bail water with a cup and switching on a pump.

3: Opt-Out from Data Brokers

Data brokers are the backbone of the problem. They sell lists of names, numbers, and behaviours to anyone who will pay. Opting out on your own means tracking down dozens of companies, filling out forms with varying formats, sending ID documents, and keeping a spreadsheet of who you contacted and when. If you take a break, the process stalls, and your data finds its way back into circulation.

Incogni flips the process. It identifies the worst offenders and handles them in parallel. It manages deadlines and resubmissions, and it builds a durable perimeter around your identity. The practical benefit is simple. You get back your time, and you get back your privacy. You also reduce the chance that a future breach will include your current details, because far fewer brokers are allowed to hold them.

4: Remove Content from Google Search Results

Even if you have removed data from the original site, Google might still show cached or indexed versions. Their “Remove personal information” tool lets you request removal from search results. Use it to reduce visibility, then pursue deletion at the source. It works, but it takes time, and not every site will comply on the first attempt. This is another reason ongoing monitoring is valuable. If a page reappears with your details, the request cycle starts again without you having to watch for it.

5: Clean Up Social Media

Your profiles are a goldmine of data. Review your settings, hide personal posts, remove geotags, and think twice before sharing details that could identify you. It can help to download an archive of your data, then prune posts in batches. If you run a business or maintain a public presence, consider separating public and private accounts and avoid posting anything that ties your daily location to your home address.

6: Secure Your Accounts and Devices

Finally, protect what you still use. Strong, unique passwords reduce credential stuffing, two-factor authentication reduces account takeovers, a password manager reduces reuse, and a VPN on public Wi-Fi limits passive network snooping. Limit app permissions to the minimum required, and periodically remove apps you no longer need. A smaller footprint is always easier to protect.

Why Incogni is the Smart Choice

Manual removal is like playing whack-a-mole. Just when you think you have won, your data pops back up somewhere else. That is what brokers count on, your exhaustion. The most common story is simple. People start with good intentions, remove a handful of listings, get busy, then give up when the same listings reappear.

With Incogni, you do not just remove your data once; you remove your data from any website that tries to profit from it. You get a simple dashboard, automated requests, and continuous monitoring that works while you focus on living your life. The outcome is not only fewer listings today, it is fewer listings next month, and fewer still next year. This compounding benefit is what makes automation superior to a one-time cleanup.

Key reasons to choose Incogni:

  • Automates removal requests to hundreds of brokers and sites
  • Monitors and re-sends requests to keep you off the lists
  • Lets you disappear from the internet without the hassle
  • Supports multiple identifiers for full coverage
  • Works under GDPR, CCPA, and other privacy laws

Protect Your Privacy

Your personal information is already out there, and the longer it stays online, the more risks you face. Scammers, spammers, and criminals profit from data brokers who package and sell your details daily. Every profile that lists your address or number increases your exposure. Reducing those profiles reduces your risk.

You can fight this yourself, but it is an uphill battle that never really ends. Or you can let Incogni take over, removing your data automatically and keeping it off the market. Think of it as a personal privacy assistant that keeps working even when you are not, and one that scales its effort across hundreds of sites at once.

If you are serious about privacy, now is the time to act. Start today and see how much of your personal information Incogni can remove. The safest data is the data that no longer exists online, and the fastest way to get there is with a system designed to find it, remove it, and keep it removed.

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