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Five data broker opt-out myths that leave retirees exposed
Have you already tried removing your personal information from data broker sites? Maybe you Googled your name, didn’t like what you saw and spent the afternoon filling out opt-out forms on sites like Spokeo, Whitepages and BeenVerified.
That took real effort, and it wasn’t wasted. Still, it doesn’t mean you’re fully protected. The problem comes down to how data brokers operate. Their system isn’t intuitive, and common misconceptions leave people exposed without realizing it.
For retirees with decades of public records, property ownership and family connections, the gap between feeling safe and actually being safe can cost tens of thousands of dollars.
After years of covering scams, one pattern keeps showing up. The most targeted victims are not people who ignored the risks. They are people who took action and believed it was enough. Let’s fix that right now.
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HOW TO REMOVE YOUR PERSONAL INFO FROM PEOPLE-SEARCH SITES
This is the most dangerous myth of all. And it’s the one I hear most often from retirees who’ve already taken steps to protect themselves.
Here’s the reality: there are hundreds of data broker companies operating in the United States. When you submit an opt-out request to Spokeo, you’ve removed yourself from one of them.
The others? They never heard from you. They’re still listing your name, your address, your phone number, your relatives and your estimated net worth — right now, as you read this.
And even the site you opted out of? It will likely relist your information within weeks or months. Data brokers pull from public records — property filings, voter rolls, court documents — that are constantly updated. Every time those records refresh, your profile can quietly reappear.
Unless you repeat them regularly, manual opt-outs don’t protect you in the long term. They buy you a temporary gap in coverage on a limited number of data broker websites.
You can use Incogni’s free scanner to check the biggest data broker sites for your information. You may be surprised by how much is still out there.
This one is painful because it involves the people you love most. Data broker profiles don’t just list you. They list your household. They list your relatives. And they map the connections between all of you.
When your daughter opted out of data broker sites, she removed her own profile. But your profile still lists her as a relative, with her current city, her approximate age, and her connection to you. That’s enough.
A scammer calls you: “Grandpa, it’s me. I’m in the hospital. Please don’t tell Mom-she’ll worry. Can you wire me $1,200?”
Scammers may already have your granddaughter’s name and understand your exact relationship to her. They know she’s your granddaughter, not your daughter, and that detail makes the call feel real. That level of accuracy is what triggers panic and lowers your guard. In some cases, they can even clone her voice using AI.
This is called the grandparent scam. It has evolved from a clumsy, random cold call into a precision-targeted operation built on data broker research. According to the FBI’s Annual IC3 Report, both the losses and number of victims of elder fraud have been climbing steeply over the last three years, with average losses in 2025 reaching $38,500.
10 SIGNS YOUR PERSONAL DATA IS BEING SOLD ONLINE
I understand why this feels true. You’re (probably) not a celebrity, don’t have a massive social media following, and have lived a private life.
But here’s what a scammer sees when they pull up your data broker profile:
A paid-off home (public property records show no mortgage). A Social Security income estimate. An address you’ve held for more than 20 years. The names of your adult children and their addresses. A spouse or late spouse. And those specific details that answer every security question your bank still uses: mother’s maiden name, previous address and the city you were born in.
To a criminal, that profile is a goldmine. In fact, personal information is implicated in 72% of elder fraud cases.
Retirees represent the single most targeted group for financial fraud in the United States. Not because older Americans are more naive. It’s because their data broker profiles are richer than anyone else’s, built over 60 or 70 years of public records.
Let me offer a different perspective. You haven’t been targeted yet. Or, more likely, you have been targeted, and the attempt simply didn’t land. A phishing email went to spam. A suspicious call got hung up on. A text message felt off in some way and you ignored it. Does any of that sound familiar? Here’s what hasn’t changed: your profile is still there, still searchable, and regularly being updated.
Data brokers don’t delete inactive profiles. They maintain them, refresh them, and sell access to them repeatedly. The question isn’t whether your information is available to scammers. It is. The question is whether the right scammer has found it yet-and whether they’ve decided the payoff is worth the attempt.
Some data brokers have been caught red-handed packaging large datasets and selling them directly to scammers for elder fraud.
Retirees with home equity, retirement accounts, or Medicare benefits are especially attractive targets. A scammer doesn’t need to reach 100 people. They need to reach one person at the right moment after a loss, during a health scare, when the grandchildren are mentioned and their research pays off.
THE DATA BROKER OPT-OUT STEPS EVERY RETIREE SHOULD TAKE TODAY
Your grandchildren grew up online. Maybe you didn’t, but that doesn’t mean digital threats can’t touch you. But data brokers don’t care when you were born. They care what you own, what you’ve signed and what public records document about your life. And for most retirees, those records go back further and run deeper than anyone else’s:
All of that is legally collected and ends up in data broker databases. And all of it makes your profile more complete-and more dangerous-than your grandchildren’s. This isn’t a tech problem. It’s a paper-trail problem. And the paper trail you’ve left over a lifetime is the most detailed (and valuable) one in the household.
The only real answer is regular, repeated data removal for you, and ideally, your entire family.
Submitting a few opt-out requests once is not enough. Your information keeps resurfacing as public records update, which means you have to stay on top of it. That can involve revisiting sites, sending new requests and checking where your data appears over time.
Some people choose to handle this manually, while others use automated services that send ongoing removal requests across hundreds of data broker sites. The key is consistency, because this system does not stop collecting or refreshing your information.
Think of it like a leak that keeps coming back. You can scoop water out now and then, or you can stay ahead of it with a system that keeps working in the background.
If you want a clearer picture of your exposure, you can run a scan to see where your personal information shows up online. That gives you a starting point and helps you understand how much work it really takes to stay protected.
See my tips and best picks on Best Identity Theft Protection at Cyberguy.com
Protecting your personal data starts with action, but real protection takes more than a few opt-out forms. Submitting requests to a handful of data broker sites only limits exposure temporarily, and those same sites can relist your details as public records refresh. Retirees face a greater risk because their profiles hold decades of information that scammers can easily connect across family members. In many cases, scammers reach out but fail to succeed due to timing or suspicion, not because your data stays hidden. Staying protected requires consistent effort, since data brokers keep collecting and updating information behind the scenes.
If your personal data can resurface at any time, how confident are you that it is not already being used against you? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com
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Trump shows up at LIV Golf event at his Virginia course after calling for players to rejoin PGA Tour
President Donald Trump is at his second golf tournament in as many weeks, both of which were at courses he owns.
A week after catching PGA Tour action at his Doral course in South Florida, Trump motorcaded to Trump National Golf Course Washington D.C. in Sterling, Virginia, to watch LIV golfers.
Trump arrived at a presidential suite via golf cart where his son, Eric, was seated with someone from the Public Investment Fund, whom the president shook hands with.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
Amid the uncertainty of LIV Golf after the league announced the Saudis would no longer fund it after this season, Trump said last week that LIV golfers returning to the PGA Tour would be beneficial to the sport.
“I do believe that all of the golfers should be playing against each other. They were viewing something as a monopoly, but it’s swaying away. It should be the opposite of a monopoly,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office last Thursday.
“I want to see Rory [McIlroy] playing Bryson DeChambeau. I want to see big Jon Rahm playing Scottie, who is so great. Scottie Scheffler is great. They have great players on LIV, but it’s almost like people want to see that. That’s why the Masters was so good, because you saw everybody together.
“The tour wants to have the best players. You can’t have the best player that they’re boycotting now. They may do something, you know, a little bit, but they’ll all be back on tour, and it’ll be great. I don’t know what’s happening with LIV.”
Trump has attended LIV events at his courses in the past. This is one of two LIV events at a Trump course this year, as they’ll head to Bedminster, New Jersey in August.
The Cadillac Championship last week, won by Cameron Young, was the first time in a decade that the PGA Tour was at one of Trump’s courses.
Trump was also in attendance for the first day of the Ryder Cup last year at Bethpage Black in New York.
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Two police officers shot, suspect ‘actively firing at police’ in Syracuse standoff lasting hours: report
Two police officers were shot, and a third was injured Saturday in Syracuse, New York, as authorities faced off with a gunman who has been “actively firing at police” for more than four hours, forcing residents to evacuate.
The two police officers who were shot, along with the third who was injured, remain in stable condition, according to a report from local outlet Syracuse.com.
The Syracuse Police Department wrote in a statement on X that the incident is “still very active,” as of 2:40 p.m. local time.
2 DEPUTIES INJURED IN MISSOURI SHOOTING, HIGHWAY PATROL INVESTIGATING
“The suspect is actively firing at police,” officials said. “Residents are urged to SHELTER IN PLACE and avoid the area immediately. Please stay indoors, stay away from windows, and avoid the area entirely. Do not respond to the scene.”
Authorities said the incident started at about 6 a.m., when police were called to investigate a person injuring a dog with a machete in a residential area a few minutes south of downtown Syracuse, Syracuse.com reported.
The neighborhood is mostly made up of public housing complexes and low-income apartment buildings.
While executing a search warrant, two officers were shot and another was injured.
Nearby residents are being evacuated by bus, according to the outlet.
New York State Police, Syracuse SWAT, Onondaga County Sheriff’s Office, Syracuse Fire Department and Syracuse University campus police are responding, according to Syracuse.com.
The Syracuse Police Department and New York State Police did not immediately respond to additional inquiries from Fox News Digital.
This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.
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