Is the dark web dangerous?

from Google, and 210+ sites
Learn which sites publish your information. It’s free.
3,578,435 have already made this search.
Try Googling yourself: first name + last name + city + state. We bet you’ll be surprised at how many sites share your very private information Address, phone numbers, email, family relationships, income range, net worth, credit score, home ownership status, political and religious affiliation, your legal records. The list goes on.
Anyone can see it. Data brokers use public records, social media, online and offline purchase information to collect and share your data for profit.
John Doe Lexington Alabama
My problem is that I want my personal info to be private. I will share what I want with people of my choosing - not the public.
Privacy is a fundamental right. Feeling outraged seeing your private information on public display is natural; it IS a violation.
We’re here to help.
I have had people trying to purchase things in my name, got my address and opened up bank accounts on me, was receiving government help off me when I battled cancer (I was denied benefits and that’s when I found out).
1 in 10 Americans have been a victim of identity fraud, often more than once. Recovery takes an average of 6 months. No one should have to experience such lack of control. We are your first line of defence.
I'm on a dating website and I don't want strangers showing up at my door.
Armed with your private information, anyone - your new online date, a colleague, or a stranger - can be a threat. Privacy is safety - yours and that of your family. No one has the right to endanger it.
Someone else’s criminal record showed up in my background report
Personal and professional reputation takes years and a lot of work to build. Datа brokers can ruin it in an instant, simply by listing inaccurate information about you — which is a very common occurrence.
I suffered from never ending robocalls which literally made every day of my life hell – both at work and at home.
We’ve all been annoyed and distracted by junk emails and calls, wondering how these entities got a hold of our information. Data brokers make your contact specifics available to spammers, without your opt-in or consent.
We scan 212 data broker websites to find your “profiles”—pages with your personal information that were created without your permission.
We send requests to each website on your behalf, asking for your profile to be removed. No matter how complex the opt-out process of a site is, we persist until the profile is removed—and update you along the way.
Every month, we revisit the 212 data broker sites to check whether your information shows up on additional sites, or has reappeared on the sites you’ve already been removed from, as tends to happen. If needed, the removal starts all over.
We typically find 155 profiles on 66 sites
for an average user. This means doing
the manual profile removal on your own
can take a stunning
800 hours per year.
Imagine scanning 212 sites each month.
Then performing (sometimes repeatedly)
all the complex opt-out procedures the
sites require.
Other services charge 25%-500% more for removing your profiles from only a fraction of the data broker sites. Privacy consultants and reputation management agencies charge from $500 to $15,000 per year to essentially do what we have figured out how to do better, for a lot less. Do your own research.
9 in 10 Onerep users report that our service has dramatically reduced their personal data exposure and made their lives safer. 70% of our users stay with Onerep for over a year, with a substantial number choosing to protect their entire family.
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