3

Mozilla targets scummy data brokers with Monitor Plus removal service

 7 months ago
source link: https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2024/02/mozilla-expands-its-privacy-focus-with-monitor-plus-data-broker-removal-service/
Go to the source link to view the article. You can view the picture content, updated content and better typesetting reading experience. If the link is broken, please click the button below to view the snapshot at that time.
neoserver,ios ssh client

Who watches the people watchers? —

Mozilla targets scummy data brokers with Monitor Plus removal service

Service pledges to automatically remove you from listing sites for $108/year.

Kevin Purdy - 2/6/2024, 2:00 PM

Illustration of Mozilla Monitor's identity leak scanning and protections

“You may be shocked to find,” the people-search websites pitch, that you or the other person you’re searching for “has a criminal record.” Other sites offer “millions of records that expose” a person for who they “really are.”

These kinds of “people search” sites are myriad. They copy from one another, and removing your information from them, while technically possible in fine-print fashion, could take days or weeks. Mozilla, the Firefox maker expanding into a suite of privacy-minded tools, has an alternative to clicking and hoping.

Mozilla Monitor Plus, just launched today, pledges to automatically monitor such "people search" sites, along with known data breaches, for your information and then take care of the removal process. The "Plus" version costs $14 if you go month by month, or $108 for a year's subscription (about $9 per month). You can still get a free scan on Monitor to see the data breaches and data brokers where Mozilla finds your information (used with Mozilla's fairly human-readable privacy policy).

Mozilla's Monitor Plus launch video.

There's a bit of name and definition confusion in how Mozilla refers to background search or people-finding sites as "data brokers." The term also refers to companies that gather information not from public records and Internet history but from the online traces left by account sign-ups, advertising, web browsing, and other things you do after clicking to agree to vague Terms of Service. Such data brokers—almost certainly working alongside the other "people search" variety—can have staggering amounts of data on nearly everybody and sell it to customers like the National Security Agency and FBI.

Advertisement
One of the kinds of data-broker sites Mozilla Monitor aims to help you cleanse of your details.
One of the kinds of data-broker sites Mozilla Monitor aims to help you cleanse of your details.
Mozilla

Still, every bit helps. Monitor claims to have helped 10 million people be alerted when their data showed up in data breaches. Using Monitor Plus, removing your data from broker sites "typically takes 7 to 14 days," according to Mozilla (though sometimes "within the hour"), with progress monitored and displayed. It's a web-based product that doesn't require Firefox to use, with a FAQ for more details.

Monitor Plus adds to Mozilla's recent slate of privacy-focused offerings, including a VPN service (which we reviewed in 2020) and Relay, a phone and email masking service. You can bundle VPN and Relay for a notably discounted price, and we'd expect to see VPN, Relay, and Monitor Plus brought together in a privacy-focused bundle at some point.


About Joyk


Aggregate valuable and interesting links.
Joyk means Joy of geeK