- Love how the article wants to share your info with 213 partners 
- hang them by the toes! no mercy for surveillance capitalists! - no mercy for - surveillancecapitalists!- There, all fixed now. - Dont hang them by the toes, just burn them alive while they are shot left and right with everything they like & love being erased in front of them. 
 
 
- I’m waiting for news in couple of days where the same guy finds out that internet knows quite a lot about him too… - OPT OUT. OPT OUT! lol 
 
- Then somebody goes and Mario Bro’s this motherfucker and out come the bootlickers going “oh but he didn’t deserve it!!!” 🤬 
- I would love to read my own folder. I wonder if I have a unique folder for each of my online personas, or if they’ve managed to consolidate all into one. - if they’ve managed to consolidate all into one. - This. - We may feel safer with multiple aliases, email addresses, using different browsers, etc. but it’s not hard for them to combine data and know exactly what profile belongs to whom. - Not that we shouldn’t try, but it’s far more difficult for the average user to evade data collection than someone who is online for a very specific purpose (and is covering their tracks with every interaction). - https://adnauseam.io/ help flood the data collection with bad data - Fascinating, thanks. This is like the ad-focused counterpart to that one AI image generation-harming tool, Nightshade. 
- This is awesome. How have I never heard of this - Welcome Mr 10,000 
 
- Happy to see this. I had a similar idea once. About every 6 months I spend a day searching a few search engines for my name. My name is fairly unique. At least one person shares my first and last name. I have seen them appear in results, listed with criminal charges that were mine. The ones that show up, I look for ‘remove my data and do not sell my information’ instructions. If they are not there, I look for a contact page and e-mail them. in the email i include: - 
links with my data i want removed 
- 
links with my data misrepresenting other people, also with a request to remove 
 - companies that blatently disregard me or remove my data but return it later, by accident or not, after some time has passed, will also get requests to remove: - 
arbitrary links to random people which have nothing to do with me but might be confused thanks to enough similarities. 
- 
many of the same requests, from several different e-mails, basically spamming them. 
 - the idea, which is probably pointless, is to taint the data on the sites that don’t comply. i also assume the companies that return my info later, are tagging all removal requests together, because why would i want to remove the data of a completely unrelated stranger? i’m wishfully thinking they end up with bad data that damages their reputation. i call it ‘fauxkakke’ aka 'fake bukakke. - the template: - I understand this information is gathered from public sources and can still be found through other data brokers. I still wish for the linked profiles to be removed from your site. {links} If you claim that I have to pay a fee to remove my personal information from your website, I will file complaints at the following sites: https://consumercomplaints.fcc.gov/hc/en-us/requests/ https://www.bbb.org/consumer-complaints/file-a-complaint/get-started http://www.reddit.com/ This is not meant to be threatening. I have no ill feelings towards your company. I also am sending e-mails to other data brokers. I am merely exercising my right to privacy. 
- 
- Says it’s FOSS. No source link on site. No source link on add-on page. I am skeptical. - Edit: I have located https://github.com/dhowe/AdNauseam, but still curious about the obfuscation. 
- sadly I didn’t manage to actually get it working on my setups 
 
 
 
- How would they know how many Internet users they have no information on? - They make a list of all internet users and then circle the ones they don’t have info on. 
- How would they know any of it is accurate? - Doesn’t matter. Advertisement has never been about truth. - Actually, this raises more questions. If ZoomInfo is anything to go by, I’m about 5 different people, none of which accurately map to the real me. - And that’s just me; there’s millions of bots and dogs on the Internet. - I think the scariest thing going forward isn’t some alphabet agency finding your anti-social messages. It’s some shitbox algorithm having a false positive and deicing you’re a threat to the regime. 
 
 
 
- Anyone know the path to hitting them with CCPA info/take down requests? - Generally you can google the site name and then “removal request” and their portal will be visible. - Some more useful info: California maintains a list of data brokers, available Here - Also, paid services will scan these lists and initiate takedown requests on your behalf automatically. I’ve found optery to be good but there are other services as well 
 
- deleted by creator 




