What the Web knows about you
- 28 January, 2009 08:12
- Comments
She had me at hello ... or just about. Our conversation had barely started when privacy activist Betty Ostergren interrupted me to say that she had found my full name, address, Social Security number and a digital image of my signature on the Web.
I had set out to discover just how much information I could find about myself online, and Ostergren, who runs the Virginia Watchdog Web site, was my very first call. If this was what could be uncovered in just a few minutes, what else would I find? Quite a bit, as it turns out.
What information is available about you in cyberspace? Where does it come from? What risks does it present and what, if anything, can you do to protect yourself? To answer those questions I decided to use my own identity, Robert L. Mitchell, a national correspondent at Computerworld , as my research subject.
Starting with the information Ostergren had turned up about me, I spent a few weeks combing through more than two dozen public and private resources on the Web and visiting many other Web sites to build a dossier on myself. I conducted both free and paid searches. I contacted a private investigator for tips on my investigation. And I spoke with data aggregators and privacy experts.
I quickly discovered that while the quantity of publicly available information about individuals to be found online is vast, it is riddled with inaccuracies. For example, I changed my primary residence more than a year ago, but many databases online still have my old address. In other cases, the information is just plain wrong.
Having a common name like Robert Mitchell -- or a famous one like Bill Gates -- makes the job a lot harder. While nuggets of information about you can be pulled up quickly, filtering out all of the data that is not actually about you and sorting out what is accurate is time-consuming. It requires a lot of digging.
But I was starting with a key piece of data -- my Social Security number -- and that makes finding relevant data a bit easier. As I gathered more data, I also reran many searches to get different -- and more targeted -- results. Here's what I found and where I found it.
Source: Government records
Information discovered: Full legal name, address, Social Security number, spouse's name and Social Security number, price paid for home, mortgage documents, signature
Much of the publicly available information on individuals online is sourced from online county, state and federal government records databases, and this is where Ostergren found my Social Security number. She hadn't purchased it from a hacker chat room or from shady characters in Russia. She got it by browsing an image of a mortgage document stored in a county database located in a building half a mile from my house.
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
- The Virginia Watchdog
- child sex offender registry
- PACER Service Center Home Page
- CriminalSearches.com
- LexisNexis
- Free People Search by ZabaSearch!
- WhitePages - Find People for Free and Connect with Confidence
- People Search - Find Public Records at PeopleFinders
- People Search & Background Check
- People Search : Background Check : Public Records by Intelius, Inc
- Yellow Pages, White Pages, Maps, and more - Switchboard.com
- Criminal Background Checks, Instant People Locator by Address & More
- ZoomInfo
- Yahoo! Search - Web Search
- Live Search
- Dogpile Web Search
- Vivisimo's Clusty
- American Society of Business Publication Editors
- Techmeme
- Technorati
- Google Image Search
- Welcome to Flickr - Photo Sharing
- Delver
- Free People Search Directory - Social Web Search - iSearch.com
- PALLORIUM - International Investigative Services
- People Search & Background Check
- People finder investigative resource software information searches
- People Search & Directory Services Powered By Intelius
- ReputationDefender : Home
- Right to Know, Publications - NHDOJ
- People Search & Background Check
- PALLTECH - The Investigative Support Service
- Acxiom: Global Interactive Marketing Services
- Acxiom: Opt-Out Request Form
- Javelin Strategy and Research
-
China's Alibaba sees big growth with AliExpress site
-
Pfizer's Future Depends on IT Transformation
-
10 Tips for Dealing with a Bully Boss
-
Social networking security in the workplace
-
Facebook stock slumps for third day
-
Optimizing Storage and Protecting Data with Oracle Database 11g
This paper focuses on key Oracle Database 11g capabilities that help IT departments better optimise their storage infrastructure, enabling administrators to deliver a cost-effective, scalable data management platform that is easy to manage, reduces costs, and protects data while continuing to deliver the performance and availability that today’s businesses require. -
Security threat report 2011
Today, users are the content. Driving the growth, and at the same time being driven by it, the explosion in mobile computing is expanding the impact of the social web. -
Providing effective endpoint management at the lowest total cost
Endpoints, otherwise known as servers, workstations, laptops, mobile devices, and virtually any other network-connected device, are critical components that enable business to be transacted. Properly implemented, endpoint management ensures continuous compliance with IT policies, regardless of where the machines are located and what type of network they are connected to.
-
Microsoft Office
-
Teach Yourself Visually Windows 7
-
Excel 2007 All-In-One Desk Reference for Dummies
-
Office 2007 for Dummies
-
Windows 7 for Dummies®
-
Windows 7 for Seniors for Dummies®
-
MYOB Software for Dummies 6E Australian Edition
-
Office 2007 All-In-One Desk Reference for Dummies
-
Computers for Seniors for Dummies, 2nd Edition








Comments
Post new comment