Go to any people finder site right now and type in your name. What comes back might shock you: your age, home address, phone number, the names of your relatives, where you used to live and even what your property is worth.
You didn't put that there, and you never consented to it. Still, it's out there, and anyone with an internet connection can see it.
Scammers figured this out a long time ago. Since then, they've turned it into a system for targeting you, your parents and your kids.
So how does it actually work, and more importantly, what can you do to stop it?
Before a criminal sends a phishing email or makes a call, they do their homework. Importantly, they don't need to hack anything. Instead, they use the same public websites that anyone can access.
In less than 10 minutes, a scammer can build a detailed profile on you using data broker sites like Spokeo, Whitepages, BeenVerified and Intelius. Here's what that profile looks like and how they build it step by step.
It starts simply. A scammer types your name into a search site. Within seconds, they see results like:
John M. Patterson | Age: 61 | Cleveland, OH
That is the starting point. Many sites show partial data for free. That is often enough to confirm identity. Full reports cost only a few dollars, so access is easy. Scammers can repeat this process hundreds of times a day, building detailed profiles with very little effort.
Next, this is where things get personal. Data broker profiles show more than your name. They reveal your family network.
That often includes:
As a result, scammers can target more than one person. For example, they may learn that your elderly parent lives alone or your child just moved. Because of that, scams like the grandparent scam feel real instead of random.
At this point, your address history becomes critical. It is not just about where you live. Instead, scammers use it to:
For example, referencing a past address makes a caller sound legitimate. That detail alone can lower suspicion.
More importantly, data brokers also reveal financial clues. These may include:
This information comes from public records, not hacking. Because of this, scammers tailor their approach. Higher-income targets may see investment scams.
Others may get job or rental scams instead.
Before launching a scam, criminals often double-check everything. They don't rely on just one site. Instead, they compare multiple data broker profiles, social media accounts and public records to confirm details are accurate.
For example, they may:
Because of this, the profile becomes more reliable. That extra step is what turns a guess into something that feels real.
At that point, they have everything they need. They know your name, family, address and financial details. Now the scam becomes highly specific.
By the time you hear from them, they already know enough to sound like someone you trust.
As a result, the scam feels believable.
This has already landed in court. The U.S. Department of Justice has prosecuted companies like Epsilon, Macromark Inc. and KBM Group for selling data to scammers. Epsilon alone paid $150 million to victims.
At the same time, data tied to the FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center shows more than half of fraud cases involving older Americans were linked to exposed personal data. That shows how serious this problem has become.
You do not need to sign up for these sites. Instead, your data comes from many sources, including:
Because of this, your information spreads quickly.
Even after removal, your data often comes back. Data brokers constantly update their databases. They buy and resell fresh records. Because of that, one-time removal is not enough.
The goal isn't to disappear completely. It's to make the profile messy enough, incomplete enough and hard enough to find that scammers move on to easier targets.
Here's what you can do:
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