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You Cannot Hide From the Public Record Search Engines

As a search engine optimization specialist, I often run across

search engines of different sorts than most people are aware of.

This week I stumbled across a free site that is used by journalists to do background

checks and fact checking on sources of news

stories. I am also an advocate for personal and financial privacy

and find privacy invasion particularly offensive, so this search

engine offends me.

The http://www.pretrieve.com/ Free Public Record Search Engine –

Person Search is an example of the databasification of all public

records. It’s instructive to take a look at the results of a

search for yourself in this free people search engine that is

apparently used often by journalists. The linked page above

takes you to the site home page which is a form allowing you to

search for a person, business, address or phone number and the

results pages can be frightening.

The results are listed as questions on the Pretrieve.com site in

a row of tabs labeled “Property Info, Criminal, Court,

Professional, Local Info, Miscellaneous” and the “Criminal” tab

(Criminal) inserts your name or that of the person you are

searching for in each possible source of criminal information

under a link labeled “Registered Sex Offender Search” then a

question with the searched name and state inserted: “Is anyone

named (your name here) a registered sex offender in “your state

here”? If you searched for your own name, it appears in that

frightening position and startles you quite handily.

The arrangement of tabs with criminal info first must be done for

the dramatic effect it has on what would otherwise be a rather

mundane search of bland information. But when I went ahead and

pressed that frightening link, I got a gratifying “no information

could be found” result page. Whew! Then again on the link leading

to the “Federal Inmate Search” I got a gratifying “Sorry. No

Inmate Named (Your name here) Race: unspecified Sex: unspecified

found.” on the new window launched on the Federal “Bureau of

Prisons” site search.

Since I write frequently online, there are hundreds of sources of

information on me available in one of the results tabs labled

“professional”, I was happy to see that my occupation was

correctly listed as “Search Engine Optimization Specialist” with

sources coming mainly from resource boxes of my articles

appearing across the web.

The interface of the Pretrieve.com result page also links you to

organizations that have published information about you and fills

in the name information, going directly to a search on the name

entered at the new site. The interface of Pretrieve.com links you

to their sources by launching new windows at different web sites

and prepopulating the search forms with the name and state info.

The “professional” affiliations are tracked by a site called

“Eliyon.com Business People Search” where links to web mentions

are tied to the byline of my articles. Seems their forte is

finding business mentions to connect with names. OK. But I was

surprised to see that one company that I work with was

incorrectly listed as being in Northern California, when they are

in fact in Southern California. Oh, and they incorrectly named,

but correctly linked to the web site of that company.

This type of error is probably common in online databases and is

one of the biggest problems with this type of data aggregation.

It is not kept current or accurate by all sources and there are

others with the same name, etc. There is a prominent link on the

Eliyon.com site labeled “Log in to Update your Profile” or the

Didn’t find yourself? Add your profile!” link is ridiculous.

Why give them info they don’t have so they give it to everyone

else?

The Property Info tab is truly offensive as it gives you a link

to the county tax assessors office record of any property owned

by someone you’ve searched for. Plus their home address, square

footage of their house, how much it is worth and amount of taxes

owed on it. Oh, and phone number, street address, zip code.

The multiple other options take you to financial records such as

bankruptcy filings, political contributions, defaulted loans and

dozens of other possible financial records you don’t want the

world to see. Why is this acceptable – and the bigger question –

why is this legal?

A very interesting note comes from the Pretrieve.com privacy page

where they make this curious statement: “It may seem contrary for

a company dedicated to making public information more easily

accessible to be an ardent supporter of information privacy, but

the fact is we take information privacy rights extremely

seriously. We believe public information should be open and made

available to everyone as adamantly as we believe private

information should remain private.”

But doesn’t making all sources of public information easily

available, make possible private information easily available

along with it? Actually, this only applies to informaiton

directly available on the pretrieve site, which is nothing other

than your computer and connection info as they don’t require

registration to use their service. They do place cookies on your

hard drive so the site will not work if you turn off that option

in your browser. The information business seems to be full of

contradictions.

Mike Banks Valentine © copyright March 9, 2005

http://PrivacyNotes.com/privacy_blog/

Mike Banks Valentine operates http://PrivacyNotes.com/privacy_blog/ Web Privacy Tutorial at: http://privacynotes.com/Phone_number_privacy.html And Performs Ethical Search Engine Optimization http://www.seoptimism.com/SEO_Contact.htm Press Release Optimization & Distribution Online If you’ve got news you can rank top for your search phrases