View Full Version : Shocked by information on flvoters.com
Cobh521
03-29-2014, 06:27 PM
I was searching the internet today and I put my home address in to see if any real estate sites gave an estimate of my property value. After entering our address I noticed in bold letters my husband's name. I clicked on it and found out it was public information from Florida's voters registration. It lists name, address, date of birth, date of registration, and party affiliation! Everyone who is registered to vote has all of this information on this site. Flvoters.com. I find this to be disturbing and can be a tool for identity theft
Carla B
03-29-2014, 08:23 PM
I agree. There's all kinds of information on the internet about ones' self. By looking at these sites, I never knew I'd lived in places I've never been to and have relatives I've never heard of. Used to opt out of these sites but it is fruitless.
Why it should be public knowledge about someone's party affiliation is beyond me.
Carl in Tampa
03-29-2014, 09:02 PM
Welcome to the Sunshine State where "Government in the Sunshine" is the law.
But, far beyond that, your information is available from dozens of Internet sources, especially if you participate in "social" websites.
Information about your home is available on the tax assessor's web site. As you discovered, information about you is available on the voter registration list.
Information on people with federally issued licenses, such as pilot's licenses and amateur radio operator's licenses is readily available.
You can probably be found, often with your date of birth, on Zabasearch.com. For a price, companies will research a person in all available public records, to include arrest records.
Enter your name in the web browser and see how many hits you get. Socially active people will find a lot.
Enter your home address is Zillow.com for details on when you bought the house and at what price. Just don't be misled about their estimate of its current worth. They are usually wildly off.
About the only Florida record not available is your driver's license and your automobile tag registration. That change was made after 9-11.
Another exclusion from the Florida Sunshine Law is current or retired law enforcement officers, but even in that case you must contact every source and "opt out."
I quit even trying years ago.
2BNTV
03-29-2014, 11:35 PM
Invasion of your personal info, is scary stuff!!!!
I find it disturbing after shopping online at one store, several other stores send me a similiar product posting. Are they all links together thru Google?
Hmmmmmmmm...............
Barefoot
03-30-2014, 12:03 AM
I find it disturbing after shopping online at one store, several other stores send me a similiar product posting. Are they all links together thru Google?
Yes, I've had that happen. I shop online at Amazon, Zappos and other stores. Once you shop for a product online, you will be harassed by ads and pop ups from many sources. It feels as if they're reading your mind. :shocked:
Carla B
03-30-2014, 07:42 AM
I recently learned about using Startpage.com as a search engine in place of Google. They claim completely private searches on the web.
Bogie Shooter
03-30-2014, 08:57 AM
I recently learned about using Startpage.com as a search engine in place of Google. They claim completely private searches on the web.
duckduckgo.com will do the same.
nitehawk
03-30-2014, 09:55 AM
duckduckgo.com will do the same.
says' Who ???--- startpage.com ---- i have a bridge for sale :mademyday:
Xavier
03-30-2014, 10:27 AM
says' Who ???--- startpage.com ---- i have a bridge for sale :mademyday:
Hey, knock it off - I already bought that bridge!
Xavier
Carl in Tampa
03-30-2014, 06:02 PM
Yes, I've had that happen. I shop online at Amazon, Zappos and other stores. Once you shop for a product online, you will be harassed by ads and pop ups from many sources. It feels as if they're reading your mind. :shocked:
If you do not routinely run an internal program to seek out and remove SpyBots from your computer it is probably infected with several of them.
SpyBots are Spy Robots that monitor your on-line shopping and report your activity to advertisers who subscribe to their service so that the advertisers can send you more ads for the same or similar products.
SpyBots gain access to your computer via having you access certain websites. They install "tracking cookies" in your computer.
One removal system, which is available for FREE is called SpyBot Search and Destroy. If you search for it you will find downloads offered at several websites.
I chose to download it from the web page of PC World which I was assured by someone more computer literate than I was a trustworthy site. Spybot Search & Destroy | PCWorld (http://www.pcworld.com/article/231438/spybot_search_and_destroy.html)
After you install it, start it up and tell it to do a search. It will report the problems found and you click on the order to remove them.
Periodically run the program again. You will find many of the same spyware cookies will have come back as you visit various sites.
Regarding Pop Ups. Your web browser should have a setting that will block pop ups. Go to your browser's Help section and look up pop up blockers.
Happy shopping.
:MOJE_whot:
If you do not routinely run an internal program to seek out and remove SpyBots from your computer it is probably infected with several of them.
SpyBots are Spy Robots that monitor your on-line shopping and report your activity to advertisers who subscribe to their service so that the advertisers can send you more ads for the same or similar products.
SpyBots gain access to your computer via having you access certain websites. They install "tracking cookies" in your computer.
One removal system, which is available for FREE is called SpyBot Search and Destroy. If you search for it you will find downloads offered at several websites.
I chose to download it from the web page of PC World which I was assured by someone more computer literate than I was a trustworthy site. Spybot Search & Destroy | PCWorld (http://www.pcworld.com/article/231438/spybot_search_and_destroy.html)
After you install it, start it up and tell it to do a search. It will report the problems found and you click on the order to remove them.
Periodically run the program again. You will find many of the same spyware cookies will have come back as you visit various sites.
Regarding Pop Ups. Your web browser should have a setting that will block pop ups. Go to your browser's Help section and look up pop up blockers.
Happy shopping.
:MOJE_whot:
Carl, Thanks for this info. I have Malware Bytes but this program found additional spyware and malware. There are 3 threats that it will not remove because it says it needs permission of the administrator. No one else uses my computer - I'm running Windows 7. I right clicked on the program in the start up menu and said that I was the administrator. That didn't work. Can't figure out how to get rid of the final 3 threats. Any suggestions?
Barefoot
03-30-2014, 10:00 PM
If you do not routinely run an internal program to seek out and remove SpyBots from your computer it is probably infected with several of them.
SpyBots are Spy Robots that monitor your on-line shopping and report your activity to advertisers who subscribe to their service so that the advertisers can send you more ads for the same or similar products.
SpyBots gain access to your computer via having you access certain websites. They install "tracking cookies" in your computer.
One removal system, which is available for FREE is called SpyBot Search and Destroy. If you search for it you will find downloads offered at several websites.
I chose to download it from the web page of PC World which I was assured by someone more computer literate than I was a trustworthy site. Spybot Search & Destroy | PCWorld (http://www.pcworld.com/article/231438/spybot_search_and_destroy.html)
After you install it, start it up and tell it to do a search. It will report the problems found and you click on the order to remove them.
:MOJE_whot:
Thanks for the explanation Carl. Can Spybot Search & Destroy be used in conjunction with Avast and PC Registry? :024:
JourneyOfLife
03-31-2014, 07:34 AM
IMO it just goes to show you how information can be published without much regard toward citizens' concern about their privacy. This may be a wake up call to some of you. This is not even the tip of the iceberg about data privacy.
Contact your elected officials and complain! Turning it into an issue will be the first step to get privacy laws updated in the US and at the state level!
Now about those websites! The website operator seems operate a bunch of sites making that sort of information available for anonymous access and it is not just voter reg info!
Here is a discussion about this very issue and the operator on another forum:Subject: Online Privacy - Personal Information - Company in Nashua, NH - Topix (http://www.topix.com/forum/city/nashua-nh/TOQMDJ9B05U1L7I3E)
After taking a look at a few of those posts on that thread/forum... and the consequential primal scream or rant, depending on how you look at it.... I did a couple of quick web searches on the name.
These are just a few links that showed up.
Tom Alciere - VOTING (http://www.tomalciere.com/)
http://www.tomalciere.com/benton.html
Bill seeks to limit access to Utah voter information (http://www.standard.net/stories/2014/01/11/bill-seeks-limit-access-utah-voter-information)
Bill aims to stop publication of voter information :: The Salt Lake Tribune (http://m.sltrib.com/sltrib/mobile3/57379675-219/access-com-database-information.html.csp)
http://nyc.indymedia.org/media/text/dont_kill_.txt
NH State Representative Tom Alciere (http://www.wsati.org/alciere.html)
Former legislator charged with assault - New Hampshire Business Review - April 10 2009 (http://www.nhbr.com/April-10-2009/Former-legislator-charged-with-assault/)
Carl in Tampa
04-01-2014, 09:18 PM
Carl, Thanks for this info. I have Malware Bytes but this program found additional spyware and malware. There are 3 threats that it will not remove because it says it needs permission of the administrator. No one else uses my computer - I'm running Windows 7. I right clicked on the program in the start up menu and said that I was the administrator. That didn't work. Can't figure out how to get rid of the final 3 threats. Any suggestions?
I also run Malware Bytes sometimes. It sometimes catches some that Spybot doesn't catch and Spybot gets some that Malware misses.
In order to run SpyBot S&D as the administrator I put my cursor on the icon for starting it and RIGHT click. It brings up a drop down menu that allows me to select "Run as Administrator." That's how I do it.
Carl in Tampa
04-01-2014, 09:25 PM
Thanks for the explanation Carl. Can Spybot Search & Destroy be used in conjunction with Avast and PC Registry? :024:
I have Avast as my basic antivirus. However, I don't think antivirus programs always protect against spyware.
Avast is my basic firewall but some sneaky spyware gets picked up when I visit some websites. Double Click is one of the most frequent. Spybot S&D catches Double Click very well.
I don't use PC Registry, so couldn't answer that.
I always run Spybot with all other programs closed, so I haven't had any problems. It can take quite a while for a full scan.
I once had a very persistent advertising spy program which kept giving me pop up advertising. Spybot couldn't detect and fix it. I was finally successful in getting rid of it using Malware Bytes, which is also a free download.
Carl in Tampa
04-01-2014, 09:36 PM
IMO it just goes to show you how information can be published without much regard toward citizens' concern about their privacy. This may be a wake up call to some of you. This is not even the tip of the iceberg about data privacy.
Contact your elected officials and complain! Turning it into an issue will be the first step to get privacy laws updated in the US and at the state level!
Now about those websites! The website operator seems operate a bunch of sites making that sort of information available for anonymous access and it is not just voter reg info!
Here is a discussion about this very issue and the operator on another forum:Subject: Online Privacy - Personal Information - Company in Nashua, NH - Topix (http://www.topix.com/forum/city/nashua-nh/TOQMDJ9B05U1L7I3E)
After taking a look at a few of those posts on that thread/forum... and the consequential primal scream or rant, depending on how you look at it.... I did a couple of quick web searches on the name.
These are just a few links that showed up.
Tom Alciere - VOTING (http://www.tomalciere.com/)
http://www.tomalciere.com/benton.html
Bill seeks to limit access to Utah voter information (http://www.standard.net/stories/2014/01/11/bill-seeks-limit-access-utah-voter-information)
Bill aims to stop publication of voter information :: The Salt Lake Tribune (http://m.sltrib.com/sltrib/mobile3/57379675-219/access-com-database-information.html.csp)
http://nyc.indymedia.org/media/text/dont_kill_.txt
NH State Representative Tom Alciere (http://www.wsati.org/alciere.html)
Former legislator charged with assault - New Hampshire Business Review - April 10 2009 (http://www.nhbr.com/April-10-2009/Former-legislator-charged-with-assault/)
I doubt that you will have any success in blocking public access to voter rolls. The reason is POLITICIANS USE THEM.
Several years ago I participated in a local election campaign for the candidate who was subsequently elected Sheriff.
As part of the campaign process, the campaign office obtained the voter registration lists for the county, broken down by precincts, with the names, addresses and party affiliation of every registered voter in the county.
These lists were provided to campaign volunteers who then "walked the precincts" going door-to-door handing out campaign literature to every registered voter in their assigned area.
The politicians are not likely to pass laws limiting access to this information which is so vital to their election efforts.
Carl in Tampa, Again thanks for this site. It took lots of persistence but I finally cleared all the threats. There was a pull down menu on the results page that allowed you to "jump to location" so I deleted the file directly rather than from the Spy Bot program. So now I have Microsoft Essentials, Malware Bytes and Spy Bot. Hard to keep ahead of them.
JourneyOfLife
04-03-2014, 07:48 AM
I doubt that you will have any success in blocking public access to voter rolls. The reason is POLITICIANS USE THEM.
Several years ago I participated in a local election campaign for the candidate who was subsequently elected Sheriff.
As part of the campaign process, the campaign office obtained the voter registration lists for the county, broken down by precincts, with the names, addresses and party affiliation of every registered voter in the county.
These lists were provided to campaign volunteers who then "walked the precincts" going door-to-door handing out campaign literature to every registered voter in their assigned area.
The politicians are not likely to pass laws limiting access to this information which is so vital to their election efforts.
You are probably correct.
I was thinking more like the state changing the rules for access to the information on the state web sites.
The person or group wanting the data must register and agree to terms of use. Then the state may have a bit of recourse to stop people from mass republishing that data which enables anyone to anonymously download it world-wide.... including the criminals!
Of course the state has to stop allowing anonymous access it to... they are the ones that set it loose in the internet wild in the first place!
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