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  • Online, your private life is searchable

    latimes.com/business/la-fi-cover-privacy16-2009aug 16,0,5663794.story

    Online, your private life is searchable

    Photos, addresses, family ties, court documents, details from MySpace
    profiles -- the moment information is published online, it can be copied and
    re-posted, and often is.

    By David Sarno

    LA Times
    August 16, 2009


    When Maya Rupert wrote an article frowning at several Southern states for
    officially celebrating Confederate History Month, Internet critics lined up
    to fire back.

    But this time, they arrived with more than harsh words.

    The 28-year-old Los Angeles attorney's detractors dug up a photo of her and
    posted it, along with details of political contributions she'd made, in an
    online discussion of the article she wrote for the L.A. Watts Times. They
    called their finds evidence of her bias on the emotionally charged subject.

    "It really surprised me when I found out that people could see how much I
    donated to Obama," Rupert said, referring to the $400 she gave to the
    candidate last year, the record of which is available through several online
    watchdog sites.

    After that, Rupert said, "they pulled a picture off my firm's website and
    said, 'Of course she's black.' "

    Until recently, personal information has been scattered across cyberspace,
    to be found or not depending on the luck and sophistication of the searcher.
    But a new crop of "snooper" sites is making it easier than ever for anyone
    with Internet access to assemble the information into a digital portrait.

    "It's amazing what you can Google," one of the people who criticized Rupert
    wrote in an online forum.

    Rupert has since learned that the photo and campaign contributions were just
    a small part of her online "footprint" -- an expansive dossier that she did
    not realize was available to anyone searching her name.

    On Snitch.name, users can enter a name -- their own or someone else's -- and
    watch as the site culls information from dozens of search engines, social
    networks and directories.

    Rupert entered her name into Snitch last week, and within a minute she was
    presented with photos of herself, details of her California Bar membership
    and the names and addresses of her sister and parents.

    "I'm a fan of open records and a fan of a lot of information being public,"
    she said. "But there's public," and then there's the unfettered Web where
    "at the touch of a button, I can find out private information about you and
    use that for other purposes."

    "It's really creepy," she said.

    Looking in the digital mirror

    Online information about consumers comes from several sources. Public
    records such as campaign contributions, property sales and court cases are
    increasingly posted on the Internet. At the same time, marketers are
    collecting information about consumers' Web browsing and buying habits. And
    then there are the thousands of online communities such as Facebook and
    Twitter, where users supply the personal information themselves.

    In general, people have felt that their information is better protected
    within the walls of social networks, where they can control what is posted
    and approve who can view it. But privacy experts warn against being lulled
    into a false sense of security.

    "The rule of thumb for Internet privacy is that you don't let it get out
    there in the first place," said Pam Dixon, founder of the World Privacy
    Forum. The moment information is openly accessible online, it can be -- and
    often is -- copied from one site to another, making it extremely onerous to
    stamp out even if it's deleted from the original site.

    "It's not like chasing Alice in Wonderland down a rabbit hole," Dixon said.
    "It's like chasing a hundred Alices down a hundred rabbit holes."

    In the course of exploring her own digital footprint, Rupert saw photos and
    information from a social networking profile she'd started in 2003 on
    Friendster.com, thinking that only her friends would be able to see it.
    Little did she know that, years later, much of the material would end up
    exposed to the open Web. Details from her MySpace profile had also been
    copied to third-party sites she'd never heard of, where they remained
    accessible no matter whether she removed the material from MySpace.

    Even if you don't post any information about yourself online, however,
    maintaining a low profile can be a challenge.

    Sites such as Huffington Post's FundRace2008 can freely gather and post
    information about hundreds of thousands of campaign contributions, including
    the donor's name and address and the amount donated.

    BlockShopper.com maps home sales -- including the property's sale price, its
    address, and the names of the buyer and seller. That data is publicly
    available, often from county assessor and recorder offices.

    Many kinds of court documents, which can contain social security numbers and
    family details, are public records. And city governments can post building
    permit applications, complete with blueprints of private homes.

    Vatche Yepremian, who runs a mortgage lending company in Glendale, said he
    was well acquainted with the array of public information available about him
    online. His footprint includes details about several properties he owns, a
    home remodel plan he submitted to Glendale in 2007 and various court
    proceedings in which he is named.

    Rather than being disturbed by the availability of data, Yepremian said it
    has been a useful tool when deciding whether to grant applicants a loan.

    "If I want to lend money to someone, I want to make sure that everything and
    anything they've told me is the truth," Yepremian said. Even a few years
    ago, verifying an applicant's claims might have required a call to a title
    company or a crosstown drive to inspect a property. Now the Web saves him
    the trouble. "It makes life much easier," he said.

    Perhaps the least understood by consumers is the practice of behavioral
    tracking, where marketing companies log activities such as the Web pages
    users visit, the ads they click and the terms they search for.

    Most companies say information about user activities is stored securely and
    anonymously.

    Even so, Paul Stephens of the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse said, "an
    individual's patterns on the Internet can reveal a tremendous amount of
    information about them, and it can be a gold mine for companies that want to
    market to you."

    Privacy advocates say many consumers are hardly aware that any of their
    online activities are being stored, much less analyzed for marketing
    purposes.

    "The standard online right now is that your information is taken and used
    unless you opt out," Stephens said. But in order to do so, consumers must
    first realize there's something to opt out of. That will require greater
    transparency on the part of those collecting information, Stephens said.

    Behavioral tracking has an Orwellian ring to it, but the ability to
    efficiently guess consumers' desires is fundamental to the fast-moving world
    of online marketing.

    "Many of our favorite sites on the Web are supported by advertising," said
    Alissa Cooper of the Center for Democracy and Technology. "It's an
    incredibly important piece of the fabric of the Web."

    That's why banning behavioral tracking is not the solution, Cooper said.
    "The real key is for consumers to know what is going on and to be able to
    make an informed choice about whether they want their data to be part of the
    process."

    Limiting your personal exposure

    With little federal regulation of the use of information that companies
    collect online, consumers are often left to their own devices to protect
    themselves.

    Googling your own name has often been referred to as "vanity searching" --
    but now it's better thought of as vigilance.

    Use search engines to keep track of what's out there about you and to spot
    unwanted leaks early. "People search" sites such as Snitch.name, Spock and
    PeekYou can also be useful when trying to clean up your digital breadcrumbs.

    If you find information about you on a website you believe has no right to
    it, write to the site owner and request that it be removed. Getting a
    response may be difficult, however, as many of the sites that compile and
    store such details are automated. If the data is particularly sensitive, ask
    a lawyer for advice.

    When signing up for a consumer or social site where you might share personal
    information, make sure to familiarize yourself with the privacy policy and
    learn how to work the site's privacy settings.

    Social networks such as Facebook give users relatively high levels of
    control over who sees their data, but don't assume that your profile is
    private by default: Often you'll need to tighten the settings yourself to
    deny access to people you don't know.

    Many government records are public by law, and preventing them from
    appearing online can be difficult, said Dixon of the World Privacy Forum.
    But consult a lawyer; judges are able to seal some documents and records,
    generally before they go online.

    It's also possible to avoid certain types of behavioral tracking. One of the
    easiest ways is to restrict your Web browser's use of "cookies" -- the tiny
    data mechanism that helps sites keep track of your browser.

    By regularly clearing your cookies, you can cut down on the number of clues
    you're offering to marketers regarding your browsing habits. Look for a
    privacy setting in your browser's "Options" area that allows you to limit
    which types of cookies your browser accepts and how quickly they expire.

    The growth of the Internet may actually spur the evolution of digital
    privacy, said Cooper of the Center for Democracy and Technology.

    "Consumers are becoming producers and putting their own content on the Web,"
    she said. "With that comes the urge to be able to control who sees what."

    [email protected]

    Copyright © 2009, The Los Angeles Times
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