Service · 04

Digital Privacy & Removal

Pull your personal data off the internet — your home address, phone number, family members' names, property records — and keep it off. A systematic digital privacy and data removal program for executives, high-net-worth individuals, and anyone whose public profile carries real risk. Part of a broader reputation management practice.

The data-broker ecosystem is worth billions. Every week, your home address, phone number, approximate net worth, and family members' names are aggregated, resold, and posted to people-search sites that index directly on Google. For public-facing executives, celebrities, or anyone who’s ever been the target of harassment, this is a physical-safety issue, not just a privacy one.

What the Program Covers

  • Data-broker opt-outs — systematic removal from 100+ aggregators (Spokeo, Whitepages, BeenVerified, Radaris, MyLife, and dozens more)
  • People-search suppression — getting your profile deindexed from the sites that most commonly rank for your name
  • Google content-removal filings — where personal contact info, explicit content, doxxing, or financial data has been published, filing the correct removal requests with Google
  • Property and court-record assessment — identifying what’s publicly searchable and, where legal, filing to restrict
  • Family-member protection — extending the same program to spouses, children, and parents whose exposure creates risk
  • Ongoing monitoring — data-brokers re-list within weeks if you don’t stay on them. This is not a one-time cleanup.

Why It Can’t Be DIY

You can technically file opt-outs yourself. You’ll spend 40 hours doing it, half of the sites will ignore you, and all of your data will be re-listed within 6–8 weeks by the same brokers under different URLs. A real privacy program uses direct relationships, legal leverage, and automated re-check cycles that catch re-listings before they surface on Google.

Who This Is For

C-suite executives of publicly known companies. Family-office principals. Anyone who has received threats or harassment. Professionals whose work generates adversarial attention (litigators, journalists, law-enforcement). High-profile creators, athletes, and public figures. And anyone whose family deserves the option to live without strangers finding their home on Google. In an active harassment or doxxing situation, this often runs in parallel with crisis management.

What a Typical Timeline Looks Like

  • Week 1: Full exposure audit — what’s public, where, and what risk level it carries
  • Weeks 2–6: Primary removal wave — 100+ sites opted out, highest-priority Google removals filed
  • Weeks 6–12: Secondary wave — long-tail brokers, legal filings, family coverage
  • Ongoing: Monthly re-check and re-filing. Quarterly exposure report. Immediate response to new listings.

Take Your Data Back

The first step is a confidential audit — I’ll show you exactly what’s public, where it’s listed, and what a realistic removal plan looks like.

Start with a Free Audit →