What is a data broker and why it matters for privacy.
Data Brokers Are The Internet's Quiet Middlemen
A data broker is a business that collects information about people, packages it into profiles, and then sells, licenses, or shares those profiles to other businesses. Sometimes the data is "basic," like your age range, postcode area, and interests. Sometimes it's far more personal, like where you've lived, what you buy, what you're likely to earn, your relationship status, or what kinds of websites you visit. The key point is this: data brokers are not the same thing as the apps you use every day. They sit behind the scenes as the middle layer of the internet economy, trading in information most people never realise is being traded.
If you've ever wondered why ads seem creepily timed, why spam callers somehow know your name, or why "people search" websites can list your old addresses, you're circling the data broker world. Even when the data is "legally obtained," the way it gets combined and resold can feel invasive because it turns fragments of your life into a product.
And no, this is not a tinfoil-hat conspiracy. It's a business model.
Where Data Brokers Get Your Data
Data brokers don't rely on one magical source. They build profiles by pulling from many streams and stitching them together.
Some of that information comes from things you knowingly provide: filling out forms, signing up for services, entering competitions, making purchases, or using loyalty schemes. Other parts come from tracking-based data that follows you around online through cookies, mobile ad identifiers, and the invisible plumbing of ad-tech. Then there are public and semi-public sources, such as company registers, property records, electoral-related data in some contexts, court records in some jurisdictions, and scraped data from websites.
The part that makes people uncomfortable is the combination. A single data point doesn't say much. Thousands of small points merged together can produce a profile that feels like a shadow version of you — not always accurate, but accurate enough to be useful to someone trying to target, rank, or predict you.
What Data Brokers Actually Sell
A data broker might sell raw lists, such as "people interested in fitness" or "new homeowners." But often what they're selling is the ability to select and target people through categories and segments. These segments can be harmless or ridiculous, but they can also become sensitive, depending on what's inferred.
The market includes advertising and marketing use cases, but it doesn't stop there. Data can feed into fraud prevention systems, identity verification tools, and "risk scoring" products. It can also power people-search services, which are effectively data broker outputs presented directly to consumers.
The details vary by broker, country, and regulation. The pattern stays the same: data becomes a commercial asset, and you become a set of attributes.
Why Data Brokers Can Be Harmful Even When They're "Legal"
The first harm is obvious: privacy erosion. People lose control over where their information goes and who can access it. The second harm is security: the more your details circulate, the more opportunities exist for scams, phishing, stalking, and impersonation.
The third harm is more subtle and more serious: decision-making based on profiles. Even if you never see it, profiling can influence what offers you receive, what ads you're shown, what content you're pushed toward, and how you're classified by systems trying to predict behaviour. When that classification is wrong, or biased, or based on shaky assumptions, it can still shape outcomes.
This is why the "it's legal" defence is weak. Legal does not automatically mean safe, fair, or ethical. It just means the rules haven't caught up to the business model, or the enforcement is inconsistent.
How To Reduce Your Exposure To Data Brokers
You cannot delete yourself from the internet with one button, but you can reduce how much of you gets harvested and resold. The goal is not perfection. The goal is friction.
Start by tightening what you share publicly. Limit the personal info visible on social profiles, and be careful with public-facing bios that include phone numbers, email addresses, or location hints. Use different email addresses for sign-ups when possible, and avoid using your main number for every service that asks.
Next, reduce tracking signals. That means turning off ad personalisation where you can, restricting app permissions, and being more selective about which apps you give access to contacts and location. On mobile, resetting your advertising ID and limiting tracking settings can help reduce long-term profiling.
Then there's the direct route: opt-outs. Many brokers provide a method to request removal, but it can be repetitive and time-consuming because there are many companies and the data often reappears. Still, removing yourself from the most visible people-search style services can reduce exposure to casual snoopers and opportunistic scammers.
If you do nothing else, do this: treat your personal data like currency. If a website is asking for details it doesn't truly need, you're probably paying with information instead of money.
Are Data Brokers The Same As "People Search" Websites?
Not exactly, but they overlap.
People-search sites are a consumer-facing version of the data broker ecosystem. They often display compiled records like names, old addresses, phone numbers, relatives, and other stitched-together details. Some are directly fed by brokers, some operate like brokers themselves, and some blur the line entirely.
If you've ever searched your name and found an eerie profile page, that's the public-facing edge of a much bigger industry.
What Regulation Exists For Data Brokers?
Regulation depends heavily on where you live. In the UK and Europe, data protection laws like the GDPR framework set rules around personal data processing, including rights to access, correction, and deletion in certain circumstances. In practice, enforcement and visibility vary, and the ecosystem evolves quickly.
In other regions, rules differ, and some places have introduced broker-specific measures such as registries or stricter opt-out regimes. The bigger point is this: data brokerage is now on regulators' radar, but it is still an industry built on complexity and low public awareness.
The best personal defence is knowing it exists, because most people are being profiled by a system they can't even name.
Tanizzle Says: If You're Not Paying, You're Probably The Product
Data brokers don't need you to "post too much" to build a profile. They need enough crumbs from enough places. The internet's middlemen are quietly assembling those crumbs into something sellable, and most people only notice when the profile leaks into their real life.
You don't have to panic. You just have to stop being casual with your data.
From Tanizzle: For You
If you've ever felt like your phone knows you a little too well, it's because the modern internet is built to observe you, predict you, and monetise the patterns. We explained why the device in your pocket behaves like a personal diary you didn't agree to publish.
If you want the deeper identity angle — the idea that your online self isn't a "version" of you, but often the most consistent record of you — this one connects the psychological and the technical reality.
If you want to understand how the web is being reshaped in ways that reduce transparency and push people into closed ecosystems, this piece on zero-click is a clean foundation.
Tanizzle FAQs: Data Brokers And Personal Data Sales
What is a data broker in simple terms?
A data broker is a company that collects information about people from many sources and sells or shares it as profiles or lists for targeting, analysis, and decision-making.
How do data brokers get my information?
Data brokers can collect data from sign-ups and purchases, tracking-based advertising systems, public or semi-public records, and scraping, and then combine it to build a single profile.
Do data brokers sell my exact browsing history?
Some data products are aggregated or categorised rather than sold as a literal list of every page you visited, but tracking-based ecosystems can still produce detailed behavioural profiles that reflect your browsing habits.
Are data brokers legal in the UK?
Data brokers can operate legally in the UK if they comply with data protection law, but legality does not automatically mean the practices are transparent or fair, and enforcement can vary.
Can I opt out of data brokers?
Many brokers offer opt-out or removal processes, but it can be time-consuming and may need repeating because data can be republished or re-collected over time.
Why do people-search websites show my old addresses?
People-search websites often compile data from broker-like sources and public records, which can include old addresses and other stitched-together details, even when you did not knowingly publish them.
Are data brokers the same as social media companies?
Data brokers are usually separate businesses that operate behind the scenes, while social media companies collect data through their platforms, though the broader advertising ecosystem can connect these worlds.
What is the biggest risk with data brokers?
The biggest risk is loss of control over where your data goes, which can lead to privacy invasion, scams, and profiling that affects how you are targeted or treated by systems you never see.