![Background power point pembukaan bergerak](https://kumkoniak.com/60.jpg)
By unlisting your number, it doesn't mean that info can't be bought and sold in the information market all day long. All you're doing is - and it doesn't even work all the time - preventing it from showing up in 411 or the White Pages. For example, a lot of people think that if you have an unlisted number, it cannot be legally published or printed.
![zabasearch zabasearch](https://d1gzz21cah5pzn.cloudfront.net/img/websites/z/zab/zabasearch.com-large.1476806666.jpg)
It would be good for people to better understand their rights. There are, for some aspects of privacy - but not for all of them. You said there's a state-given right for privacy. Matzorkis: There are other sites like ZabaSearch online already. WN: What about people who don't live in states where those protections exist? Why should they have to proactively defend their state-acknowledged right to privacy, and how can they? Why should the burden be on the citizen? Doesn't your company bear some responsibility? But you have to go to a court to have the information masked and get protection.
![zabasearch zabasearch](https://static0.sitejabber.com/img/websites/z/zab/zabasearch.com-300w.1541862246.jpg)
#Zabasearch drivers#
If you buy a home, get a drivers license or register to vote, those are all sources of public records. box or non-identifiable address associated with you on all state or legal documents. Zakari: Many states - including Massachusetts, Maine, New Jersey - have a program called the Address Confidentiality Program in which, if you can show a verifiable threat, you can have a P.O.
![zabasearch zabasearch](https://i.pinimg.com/280x280_RS/35/6d/4f/356d4f30fa7596ce19c2fcf66f5f16fc.jpg)
So I would say to those people - if you are under threat, get state help from the courts. You have to go to the core - the state and public information level. The data replicates too quickly in the information industry. But opting out of every single database won't fix that problem. Your address, social security number or other info. There are laws in some states like Massachusetts, where the state will go to the data source and force the changing or removal of information. But the real solution to that problem involves more than removing that info from one database. WN: What do you say to domestic-violence victims, people who've been stalked or others who fear for personal safety as a result of the fact that their home addresses and phone numbers - information they may have made efforts to keep private - are so easily available through your site?
![zabasearch zabasearch](http://itools.com/static/i/fav/zabasearch-usa-person-search.png)
You, or the people selling it to other companies to market things to you? People realizing that right now as a result of stumbling on ZabaSearch may find that shocking, but the data has been out there for years. is a multibillion-dollar-a-year industry. When you apply for a credit card, and you don't check the box saying you don't want your information shared, it will be sold. Matzorkis: When you move and fill out a change form with the post office, they record date of move and new address, then sell that to info brokers on the open market. Court records, county records, state records, information that becomes publicly available after you buy a new house or go to the post office and file a change-of-address form. Information collected by the government, and information that individuals put it out into the public domain. WN: Where does the data on ZabaSearch come from? If your information is already out there, the logic goes, at least now you'll know about it. But founders Nick Matzorkis and Robert Zakari maintain they're not villains, and that their service is a step toward data democratization.
![Background power point pembukaan bergerak](https://kumkoniak.com/60.jpg)