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	<title>Comments on: Your Personal Information is Not Protected!</title>
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	<link>http://www.jamesmaurer.com/your-personal-information-is-not-protected.asp</link>
	<description>Exposing internet scams plus cool tools that will help you stay secure while traveling the internet.</description>
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		<title>By: Russell</title>
		<link>http://www.jamesmaurer.com/your-personal-information-is-not-protected.asp#comment-66654</link>
		<dc:creator>Russell</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 30 Sep 2009 18:24:53 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Yeah, they change your registrar information so it can&#039;t be viewed. But every domain provider that does it charges as far as I know. Plus your email address and home address plus name is attached to the registrar information for public viewing. Even if you do get it hidden there are other whois services who might have your information cached, so defeating the purpose.

It really doesn&#039;t bother me too much on my domains. The email address attached to it you can contact me through it but I hardly check it. Plus my home address is rural, so good luck on finding me, but if they want to send me junk mail, then do it, lol.

So good idea not using a personal e-mail address and if you got a P.O. Box use it, but check with your registrar first because it might be against the rules.

As far as personal information on those people search sites, good luck at that. There are tons of them, even if you can get it removed, it may reappear sometime in the future.

Our information now days is public domain. All we got is our social security number if in US, the rest is public. So there is not really much we can do, I say just go with the flow. As you can see information is transferred more rapidly now days. Even if I can block my whois information for my domain, they can pull up information from these people searching services like Vaunne said. You can&#039;t pay them all to hide your identity. It is just a waste of time and right now is the impossible.

Maybe local government will step in, even if they do there is still other governments that don&#039;t have to do anything about it and this is the world wide web. Even if we can block US companies from distributing personal information we can not block a country with no law against it.

As you can see where I am going with this, we our powerless in blocking our own personal information, for now we can only go with the flow. No need to spend the cash, it is just worthless to even try to cover your tracks.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Yeah, they change your registrar information so it can&#8217;t be viewed. But every domain provider that does it charges as far as I know. Plus your email address and home address plus name is attached to the registrar information for public viewing. Even if you do get it hidden there are other whois services who might have your information cached, so defeating the purpose.</p>
<p>It really doesn&#8217;t bother me too much on my domains. The email address attached to it you can contact me through it but I hardly check it. Plus my home address is rural, so good luck on finding me, but if they want to send me junk mail, then do it, lol.</p>
<p>So good idea not using a personal e-mail address and if you got a P.O. Box use it, but check with your registrar first because it might be against the rules.</p>
<p>As far as personal information on those people search sites, good luck at that. There are tons of them, even if you can get it removed, it may reappear sometime in the future.</p>
<p>Our information now days is public domain. All we got is our social security number if in US, the rest is public. So there is not really much we can do, I say just go with the flow. As you can see information is transferred more rapidly now days. Even if I can block my whois information for my domain, they can pull up information from these people searching services like Vaunne said. You can&#8217;t pay them all to hide your identity. It is just a waste of time and right now is the impossible.</p>
<p>Maybe local government will step in, even if they do there is still other governments that don&#8217;t have to do anything about it and this is the world wide web. Even if we can block US companies from distributing personal information we can not block a country with no law against it.</p>
<p>As you can see where I am going with this, we our powerless in blocking our own personal information, for now we can only go with the flow. No need to spend the cash, it is just worthless to even try to cover your tracks.</p>
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