Google Yourself, You Might Be Surprised

Category: Privacy

Have you ever used Google, Bing, or another search engine to search for your own name, address or phone number? In an age of powerful search engines, social media, artificial intelligence, and changing attitudes about privacy, you might be shocked to see what a casual searcher can learn about you. If you're okay with that level of transparency, then fine. If not, read on for some tips on what you can do about it...

How to Remove Personal Information From Google

If you search for yourself on Google, you may be surprised by the results. Things you posted on social media without thinking twice; blog posts or news reports that mention you in an unflattering or libelous manner; an embarrassing photo; public information such as property records, court records, or political affiliation; even your home address or phone number... all of these are examples things you'd probably wish you could remove from Google.

Recently I saw an example of a well-meaning person who saw a neighbor dumping trash. He posted a photo on social media of the man's truck, along with his name, license plate number and home address. Thankfully, several people warned that this could put both the poster and the bad neighbor in danger, and the personal information was removed. But that doesn't always happen.

It's not easy to remove information from Google (or any other search engine), once it gets found and indexed. Google's business is indexing Internet content so that people can search for it. Since Google does not control what is published on the Web, you have to start with the person or entity that published what you want removed.

Remove personal info from Google

If you published something you regret, delete it. If the offending info is on someone else's site, ask the poster, publisher or site administrator to delete it. Look for a "Contact Us" or "About" page on the website to find their contact information. Then, when Google's Web-crawler indexes the site again, it will delete Google's cached copy of the now-missing content, and it will no longer appear in search results. But that may take a while, depending on how often Google indexes that particular website. To speed up the process, you can file a remove outdated content request with Google. But first, you must be sure that the content you want removed from Google search results has been removed from the Web.

If you can't get the content owner to remove the offending content, there are some special cases in which Google will intervene. On the Remove your personal information from Google help page, Google lists things such as "non-consensual explicit or intimate personal images," "financial, medical and national ID information," and cases where “doxxing” (exposing information with an intent to harm) is involved. Google won't help you remove the offending information from the page where it exists but they will expunge it from their search engine database so it is not easily found.

Dealing with other people who control content you don't want online requires diplomacy, lawyers, or both. It's always best to start with a polite approach: "Hi, sorry to bother you but I have a problem with this content... would you please delete it?" You'd be surprised by how cooperative neutral strangers can be.

More Removal Tools

Google has another tool for requesting removal of content from sites it owns, including Google Search, YouTube, Google Maps, and others. Requests for removal through this tool must rely on legal issues, i.e., violation of copyright, privacy, or child p**nography laws.

My article Breaking Up With the Internet (is hard to do) discusses your options for removing personal data from social media, online phone directories and other places.

The best way to keep unflattering information about yourself out of Google is to keep it off the public Internet. That means tightening up the privacy controls of all your online hangouts: Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, TikTok, Linkedin, etc. You can adjust privacy settings to limit who can see your information. Set your profiles to private or restrict visibility to friends only. For several years, I had been accepting all Facebook friend requests. But I decided to prune my friends list from over 1000, to under 100 people that I personally know.

Also, watch what you say in web forums, which are also indexed by Google unless the administrator has added a "do not index" tag to his forum. Be careful what you post on your own website, Facebook page, or blog.

Data brokers such as Intelius, Spokeo, Whitepages, and PeopleFinder collect and sell or display personal information. Most of these sites have an opt-out page that lets you request the removal of your information. This process can be time-consuming but will help to reduce your "digital footprint."

You can use Google Alerts to monitor what's being said about you or your business online. There are also very expensive services like Reputation Defender that will fight on your behalf to remove offensive or incorrect content.

Of course, if it's someone who has a grudge against you, you may need to decide whether getting the offending content removed is worth the cost of these services, or even legal fees. But there's always the bluff. Sometimes sending a threatening letter spiced with a bit of legalese will do the trick.

If you are content creator, such as a musician, writer or digital artist, you may find that someone else has used your music, article or artwork without permission. This has become a bigger problem with the recent advent of "generative AI" tools that create content by imitating or taking portions of copyrighted materials, combining it with other content, and passing it off as something new and original. Some of these tools can write articles or term papers, create works of art, or write music. One example is the song "Heart on My Sleeve" which was created by AI software. It appears to be a collaboration between musicians Drake and The Weeknd, but it's an AI fabrication. In such cases, you can initiate a DMCA Takedown request to have the offending content removed.

But Wait, There's More...

Of course, Google is not the only search engine in town. Although it has a smaller reach, you should search for yourself on Microsoft's Bing search engine as well. If you find something that's troubling, use the Report a Concern to Bing page. You can report broken links or outdated pages, unauthorized use of intellectual property, child p**nography, offensive material, exposure of private information or images, or malicious pages.

Yahoo also has a page to remove search results from Yahoo Search, but it's rather vague. They say "If a website contains personally identifiable information, known as "PII" (like a social security number, or credit card number), then Yahoo may be able to remove the info from our search results... See our support options for more assistance."

In addition to searching for your personal info on Google, Bing or Yahoo, there's one more place you might want to look. The Internet Archive is a collection of over 600 billion Web pages, captured over the past 25 years. You can use it to see what a Web page looked like in the past. The point here is that something pertaining to you might have been removed from a given website years ago, but still lives on in this archive. See
how to remove something from the Internet Archive.

Do you have any good tricks for getting personal info removed from Google or the Web? Post your comment or question below...

 
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Most recent comments on "Google Yourself, You Might Be Surprised"

Posted by:

chris
03 Sep 2024

Wow, I did not know that I lived in Honolulu, Hawaii
;-)


Posted by:

Kevin
03 Sep 2024

There is only one person with my first and last names (me). Doing this Google search years ago I found it brought me to my front doorstep (which I wasn't thrilled about). I set about to remove myself. Years ago I was self employed and thought it would be cool to list my business. Took years to get rid of all that from business directories. Then every year I'd still get a big fat catalog in the mail for business, office and warehouse supplies. I'd cancel it, but it would be back again the next year. I called and was told they were sent automatically to every business listed on Dunn & Bradstreet.(Had no idea I was listed on there!). Calling them, I had to really convince them I was no longer in business. Finally they checked and believed me and removed me. Now, I never use my last name anywhere online (except for online banking and insurance accts). I won't even have an acct. on Microsoft for my Windows PC. I delete all my browsing history and cookies using CrapCleaner every time I start or stop my computer and use full Ad-Blockers. My bank doesn't even know me until I log in! Then they email me that an unknown device accessed my acct.!


Posted by:

FrancesMC
05 Sep 2024

There's another angle about having your info on Google. Is it accurate? I Googled my name and on the first 2 pages, they misspelled it every time but one. I think that is inexcusable and exceptionally sloppy of Google. Why do I care? In my younger days, I was involved in computer matters and there may be people who would like to connect with me again. And I had at least one situation where I needed to find info on someone I was trying to find. (I had found something that had a name attached and I wanted to return it. And I did, eventually.)


Posted by:

FrancesMC
05 Sep 2024

I don't suppose it would hurt to tell the story of my find. My daughter found a fraternity pin in a box in our basement and the owner's name was engraved on the back. It had been sitting there undisturbed for years. My husband guessed that the box had belonged to his aunt but she had been dead for 50 years so not available to answer questions. I Googled the name and the fraternity. Nothing about the name but the fraternity still existed so I asked the university for help and it found the name in old records. And I mean old - WW2 vintage. So I searched again for the name now that I had more info and found obits and wedding info which gave me family names and found a son and an address which sounded right. Wrote him a letter, asked for private info to identify him, said I would mail it but he came to pick it up. But no clue to how it got there in the first place.


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