The $250 billion machine that turns your private hardships into inventory

A company you’ve never heard of knows what time your phone went to sleep last night, your real-time medical worries and your exact income. Here’s how it sells your life for pennies, and how to stop it.

⚡ TL;DR

  • A reader asked why he should bother removing his data if it’s already online. Short answer: It’s working against you.
  • Data brokers hold files with up to 3,000 details on you and sell your whole profile for about 36 cents.
  • Deleting apps won’t save you. Here’s what actually does.

📖 Read time: 2 minutes

Share:
Share via email - The $250 billion machine that turns your private hardships into inventory Share on Facebook - The $250 billion machine that turns your private hardships into inventory Share on LinkedIn - The $250 billion machine that turns your private hardships into inventory Share on X - The $250 billion machine that turns your private hardships into inventory
ChatGPT/Kim Komando

I need your help: Add Komando.com as a preferred source on Google

“Kim, I’ve heard you talk about data brokers. What’s the big deal? All my data is already being sold. Why should I pay Incogni to remove it?”

Patrick in Dayton, Ohio

Patrick, I love this question, because it’s exactly what the data brokers are counting on you to believe. That it’s already out there, so why bother?

That’s like saying your front door’s been unlocked for years, so why start locking it now?

🫆 ‘Out there’ isn’t harmless

Your data is what lets a scammer call and sound like he knows you. It’s what quietly bumps your insurance quote. Removing it won’t make you vanish. But it shrinks the target on your back.

You’re not paying to disappear. You’re paying to stop being low-hanging fruit.

You didn’t take a single Facebook quiz today. Doesn’t matter. A company you’ve never heard of is holding a digital twin of you. It knows your income, your prescriptions, your politics and the precise spot where your phone spent the night. (Yes. Your bedroom.)

Welcome to the data broker industry. A $250 billion economy. To them, you aren’t a customer. You’re inventory. And they will sell your data to literally anyone who wants to buy it. There are no checks and balances. If you got the cash, you get the data.

🕵️ This is unbelievable

Acxiom, one of the biggest brokers, claims files on 2.5 billion people, with up to 3,000 details apiece.

They don’t know you. They sort you by your weak spots. A Senate investigation caught brokers selling lists titled “Rural and Barely Making It” and “Tough Start: Young Single Parents.” 

One company even sold a list called “Rape Sufferers.” Yes. That exists. Another, “Suffering Seniors,” went to scammers who used it to hunt the elderly. Nice.

Look up a scary symptom at 2 a.m.? That worry gets bundled and sold to insurers who use it to raise your premiums.

The price? Your full profile often sells for about 36 cents. Your whole life, marked down to less than a stick of gum.

🔒 Why deleting apps won’t save you

Most people tweak a few settings and assume they’re safe. They’re not.

Even if you delete every app, you still live inside a “shadow profile,” built from data other people hand over. Every time a friend syncs their contacts, your name and number ride along. Brokers backfill the rest from public records. You can’t opt out of being in someone else’s address book.

You can fight back. Every major broker has an opt-out, usually buried deep on its site. But they re-add you every few months, so doing it by hand is a losing game of whack-a-mole.

That’s why I let a service do it for me. Incogni has made 2,789 removal requests on my behalf, hunting down brokers and firing off deletion demands again and again.

Get 60% off at privacykim.com with code KIM60.

You did nothing wrong. You turned into inventory. Time to take your life off their shelves.

📩 Send this to someone who still says they “have nothing to hide,” not realizing their medical and money worries are being sold to corporate bidders for pennies.