Flash Wrote:
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> And the crazy thing is that you don't need to know
> much about what you are doing. Unfortunately a
> lot of information that is out there is 'public
> record' so you can do nothing about it. All you
> can do is keep enough of the peripheral
> information about yourself, your life, your family
> either off of the web entirely or as anonymously
> as possible out there.
>
> I periodically search the web for myself. Luckily
> there are enough folks with my same first and last
> name that a search yields too many people to be
> useful. There was a big brouhaha here because a
> few years back Driver's License information was
> posted on the state's Motor Vehicles website
> containing waaaaay too much personal information
> (basically all information from your license
> application). Similarly documents on the Property
> Appraiser's website were showing buyer and seller
> social security numbers. Both of those have
> subsquently cleaned up their acts about what is
> displayed to the casual visitor.
I was amazed a few years back when I googled my name and an old resume that I had created to apply for a particular job was online for the world to see.
I knew the source because it was a special version of my resume that, while not inflated, was creatively polished to highlight specific strengths. I had used it once, and that was it.
But there it was posted on a job search website.
Come to find out, that employer uses that site to screen applicants, so, when I emailed my resume to them, they entered it into the site with other applicants.
So, there in the first line was my name, address, phone number, cell phone number, email address, schooling and job history, along with contact information for my references.
It was not pretty, nor was it easy to get my info out of that data base. The Job Search company told me the only one who could edit or delete a file was the person who entered it. It took several weeks of back and forth phone calls to get it resolved.