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How to CRUSH DATA BROKERS with Rob Shavell from DeleteMe

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  • Опубликовано: 14 авг 2024
  • How do data brokers work? How do they find your data? What can you do? A super insightful interview with Rob Shavell from Abine DeleteMe to offer an inside look into the data industry of people-searching sites.
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    Timestamps:
    00:00 Introducing Rob
    01:00 Defining 'people-searching websites'
    04:12 Why do people-searching sites even exist?
    06:06 How are people-searching sites different from phone books?
    13:27 Where does all this data come from?
    18:17 How do these sites correlate data to an individual?
    22:04 How do people investigate themselves? Is this a wordwide problem?
    25:05 The emotional, personal, and 'real' side of privacy
    29:05 What options do people have to address the problem?
    34:22 Covering preventative measures
    36:38 Covering automatic profile deletion & services like DeleteMe
    38:41 What's the scope of what DeleteMe deletes?
    41:05 Is DeleteMe available outside of the US?
    42:18 What's the long-term solution to this problem?
    47:03 Does privacy regulation impact DeleteMe effectiveness?
    49:52 The story behind Rob, privacy, and DeleteMe
    53:17 Closing Words
    References:
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    Standard DeleteMe Link: joindeleteme.com/
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    #deleteme #privacy #techlore

Комментарии • 55

  • @techlore
    @techlore  Год назад +8

    Major thanks to Rob for coming on Techlore 🙏
    *➡If you enjoy these interviews, support us on Patreon so we can keep them going - thanks for watching everyone!* patreon.com/techlore

    • @kulled
      @kulled Год назад +2

      FIRSTTTTT

    • @HelloWorld-zu3ru
      @HelloWorld-zu3ru Год назад

      Was there a reason a certain "word " was cut out at 30:13 - 30:15 ?

    • @rosanneallen-hewlett9973
      @rosanneallen-hewlett9973 5 месяцев назад

      Are you saying that since my personal info. had been Hi-jacked' (some of it wrong), and because I'm not in Calif., that it would be useless to sign up for your service? Are you? -R

  • @MalachiMarvin
    @MalachiMarvin Год назад +19

    If I remember correctly, not only was the phone book opt out, you had to pay a fee to opt out. They called it an 'unlisted number'.

    • @Provocateur3
      @Provocateur3 Год назад +1

      Also back then there was a resource called the City Directory. You could not opt out. It had much more information than the phone book. It was available at any public library to anyone.

    • @laurencefraser
      @laurencefraser Год назад +3

      Of note, such phone books and directories tended to only be for a specific area, and quite scarce or difficult to access if you weren't in that area. Usually, anyway.

    • @Provocateur3
      @Provocateur3 Год назад

      @@laurencefraser:
      Yes, good point.

    • @SirenaSpades
      @SirenaSpades 6 месяцев назад

      It was the phone company. You paid the phone company for an unlisted number. Also, operators could connect people to numbers, so it wasn't just the phone book. You had to pay for the unlisted number. There were various grades of phone services. From party lines, which was the most basic service, a shared line among multiple houses where your neighbor down the street might pick up and listen in on your call. A listed number. The unlisted number. There may have been more options.

  • @redeyesdrogon786
    @redeyesdrogon786 Год назад +7

    This was a great interview. I hope to see more interviews like these in the future!

  • @maxmustermann7365
    @maxmustermann7365 Год назад +10

    Does anybody know how this applies to EU?
    In the EU
    - giving personal information to 3rd parties without consent is strictly prohibited
    - we have a right to be forgotten
    Are there such data broker companies in the EU and how should they receive data if I didn't gave my consent in cookie banner?
    (Sure they could illegaly but that would shut down the company legally)

    • @jacquelinemanzano9328
      @jacquelinemanzano9328 Год назад

      absolutely, how do you think the for profit corporations market their products to the consumers. Not everyone watches TV but just about everyone receives mail and phone messages.

    • @maxmustermann7365
      @maxmustermann7365 Год назад

      @@jacquelinemanzano9328 I mean Google does not share personal data to 3rd in terms of transferring copy's of data.
      Google just sells advertising customers the possibility to publish their ads to targeted groups (according to them) so I wonder what those shady cooperations are.
      With Meta idk, they openly contradict GDPR in so many ways

    • @adam.maqavoy
      @adam.maqavoy Месяц назад

      @@jacquelinemanzano9328 Thats not what he asked?
      Were you *Born Yesterday* as the rest of your Nation?

  • @danieru3
    @danieru3 Год назад +3

    A great interview, thanks!

  • @shayantsital1783
    @shayantsital1783 Год назад +6

    The only issue i have is that it's not available in most countries outside of US

    • @kerjakita2609
      @kerjakita2609 Год назад

      Yes too bad, we also this features internationally

    • @cytroyd
      @cytroyd Год назад

      Try Incogni.

    • @kerjakita2609
      @kerjakita2609 Год назад

      @@cytroyd too bad also US, UK, EU only

  • @greob
    @greob Год назад +3

    Nice interview!

  • @accidentsafe
    @accidentsafe 10 месяцев назад +1

    My mom paid $5 a month to keep her name out of the phone book. Also gave her a private number.

  • @adam.maqavoy
    @adam.maqavoy Месяц назад

    *DeleteMe* Only exists in US (where the servers are located)
    None of The Suggestion you just *Provided* applies - For the rest.

  • @JEdwardBanasikJr
    @JEdwardBanasikJr Год назад +1

    Being removed from the yearly printed "White Pages" residential phone book was not as simple as calling your phone company. You had to pay the equivalent in today's money of $10 a month for an unlisted number. People could still dial 411 and pay ($2.50 today) to get your phone number and address. Only a fool would have listed their cell phone number in the phone book back in the 90s if it was even an option. It was also $50 equiv a month for each service: Home phone number (caller-id extra), Internet (dial-up only) and Cell Phone (no free minutes at $1.75/minute for both incoming and outgoing calls). The only good thing back then was no company could afford to collect your data.

  • @rwgreene999
    @rwgreene999 Год назад +1

    In the 'old days' we had to pay to op-out of the phone book.

  • @Not_Your_Regular_News
    @Not_Your_Regular_News 6 месяцев назад +1

    Ever notice how few views around these videos. Makes you wonder why

  • @quickmythril2398
    @quickmythril2398 Год назад +3

    the phone book conversation is a bit off here. they did have names, addresses and numbers. yes they required you to ask to be unlisted, but it was a very easy thing to do. no one considered that extreme. and you CAN still get calls. several times you make it sound like an unlisted number is practically disconnecting your line. no, you can get calls from anyone you give your number to. it just wasn't public.

    • @quickmythril2398
      @quickmythril2398 Год назад +1

      also henry, it was not the "cell company". this was before cell phones. :)

  • @rwgreene999
    @rwgreene999 Год назад +1

    I moved half way across the country. I used google street view extensively as well as google earth. I would go up and down the street, check the next blocks, check the view from Earth, before I would ever contact the real-estate people about a house. The moving company reviewed street view to make sure they could get their truck up to the house. The tree trimming people reviewed street view to determine if it was worthwhile coming out to make an estimate. If you managed to block street views, then you are blocking potential sales ability and work contracts.
    The real thing to do is block private information and project public information.

  • @Jzombi301
    @Jzombi301 Год назад +1

    i searched on multiple different search engines using a bunch of different search terms but i couldn’t find any information about me. i did find stuff about my mom. i looked on whitepages and searched many different variations of my name and my phone number and address but i still couldn't find myself. i know im not invisible but i did delete nearly all my social media and changed my name on the ones that i kept. but i still feel like i should've found something, especially with my phone number and address. am i doing something wrong? is it normally this hard to find information about yourself?

    • @SirenaSpades
      @SirenaSpades 6 месяцев назад

      You just go on google and search your first and last name. Example: John Smith

  • @hamzah9089
    @hamzah9089 Год назад +1

    Some of this stuff in inaccurate. The vast majority of the data on people search websites comes from you and services you sign up for. For example, if you go and get a bank account or sign up for some order with your true name, address, phone number etc. When you give that info to your bank or a service, they sell that information to marketing companies and data aggregators like Lexis Nexis, CLEAR, etc. Many of these people search sites just buy the data from these guys, or source them from leaks. I don't believe much of it comes from social media sites,

  • @Kas_Styles
    @Kas_Styles Год назад +3

    Great interview

  • @lister1580
    @lister1580 Год назад

    Is there going to be an arken tutorial?

  • @jacquelinemanzano9328
    @jacquelinemanzano9328 Год назад +4

    Data Brokers are NOT immune from the law. They can , have been and will be sued by consumers for non disclosure and no, written, express or implied consent. These data brokers are committing a voluntary act by publishing your private and public information, there is no law that I can find that gives them authority, they simply assumed to role to do it for profit. So, I am going to assume the role of {Plaintiff and sue them for violations of my privacy and identity theft, since they have my private info without my consent.

    • @CatalinaFOIA
      @CatalinaFOIA 2 месяца назад

      Should be a class action lawsuit against data brokers who post your information.

  • @mukkaar
    @mukkaar Год назад

    Third party sharing of information is really the most problematic part, and ofc just internal security of the service you are using in first place.
    But third party sharing just doesn't make sense, if data is shared with third party, what about their terms of service? Or what about one after that if third party shares it? Customer didn't agree to those.
    I mean terms of service is kinda shaky subject anyways, but at very least customer should shown every single third party service they share data with and made to agree with sharing of data and possibly terms of service for those. And possibly ones after that.
    If that's too hard, they could just not share anything.

  • @c-LAW
    @c-LAW Год назад +9

    Isn't DeleteMe a data broker since they also collect all your personal information to battle tech companies who collect all your personal information?

    • @UNcommonSenseAUS
      @UNcommonSenseAUS Год назад +6

      Ding!

    • @laurencefraser
      @laurencefraser Год назад +6

      Comes down to a single outfit that Might be trustworthy vs many that definitely are not, I suppose.

    • @UNcommonSenseAUS
      @UNcommonSenseAUS Год назад +3

      @@laurencefraser lol

    • @quickmythril2398
      @quickmythril2398 Год назад +3

      @@laurencefraser reminds me of the VPN situation.

    • @adam.maqavoy
      @adam.maqavoy Месяц назад

      By your definition - Is *Facebook* not a *Data broker?*

  • @uniquecintron3119
    @uniquecintron3119 3 месяца назад

    Who drinks out of a vase 😂

  • @DougGrinbergs
    @DougGrinbergs 11 месяцев назад

    6:17 White Pages then vs now

  • @M0rn1n6St4r
    @M0rn1n6St4r Год назад +8

    Until I watched this interview, I had _no idea_ - Joe Rogan knows a lot about technology, _digital_ security, and privacy. 🐵

  • @CCCC-tq8yo
    @CCCC-tq8yo Месяц назад

    Whow did u see there privacy and there right to sell ur date

  • @zoenagy9458
    @zoenagy9458 Год назад +5

    $129/year :D

    • @quickmythril2398
      @quickmythril2398 Год назад +1

      oof, yeah no thanks. not sure why it needs to be recurring anyway. can't we just do it as a one-time? that kind of makes no sense.

    • @maxmustermann7365
      @maxmustermann7365 Год назад +5

      If you pay for a recurring service, the payment must be recurring too, to be profitable.
      You probably can't go to a barber and pay once per lifetime either

  • @gnawledge9083
    @gnawledge9083 Год назад

    He didn't know the answer....