Recently, Google added an option for users to opt-out of their private information being shown in search results. However, it is important to understand that this does not provide you with a sufficient level of protection against your address and your phone number is easily accessible online.

Why Google Did It

Spurred by GDPR and California Privacy legislation, Google has been under increased pressure to police the publication of private information on its search engine.

A successful lawsuit in the European Union resulted in the establishment of a “right to be forgotten” online. Since then, Google has received more than 650,000 requests from individuals throughout Europe to remove their personal information. The company’s new privacy update is an attempt to provide a consistent policy everywhere.

What The Policy Does

If you search for someone’s name on Google, search results showing sites like Nuber and Spokeo may display information such as “John Smith, 123 Main St, Los Angeles.” Under the new policy, the address will not be shown in the search result. Instead, it may say “John Smith was found”, thus still encouraging people to visit those sites for more information.

Sites like these also advertise on Google, and it is not yet clear if those ads would be similarly impacted by the new policy.

Why You Are Still Not Protected

Here are just some of the reasons this new policy will not keep your address and phone number off the Internet.

  1. The policy covers only non-public information, so your personal information from homeownership, the DMV, bankruptcies, etc. will still be accessible.
  2. Your personal information will still be accessible from other search engines, as well as on paid sites, social media sites, and other sources.
  3. While Google may mask your private information, it will not remove it. Someone searching for your address on a people-finder site such as Spokeo will still be able to access it there. All the Google policy eliminates is the display of your address in its search results.

Should I Sign Up Anyway?

You could – but be warned that the registration process is not without some effort. You have to find your information, copy the URL, collect a screenshot of the information, and submit it for each instance found. It will take a few minutes to do each request, and you have to continually monitor Google to find new information.

Why We’re Better

We automatically complete the program registration for Google’s new policy and monitor their search for each client. Plus, our IronWall360 privacy team uses our proprietary software to search and remove not just search results, but the underlying information located on websites – including public information not covered by the Google program.

When we find content that should be removed, we don’t just send a letter or an email to the website and hope for the best – we follow up as often as it takes to get that content taken down, even if that means contacting the Attorney General’s office. One way or another, we always get results.

Find out more about our IronWall360 online privacy protection service

 

Ron Zayas

CEO

Ron Zayas is an online privacy expert, speaker, author, and CEO of 360Civic, a provider of online protection to law enforcement, judicial officers, and social workers. For more insight into onli... Read more

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