ClustrMaps
A marketingsite that exposes your name, address, phone, and relatives. Here's what they collect, how to opt out, and why it matters if you're on the job.
Visit ClustrMapsWhat ClustrMaps collects
- Full name
- Current and prior addresses with map pin
- Approximate age
- Relatives and household members
- Sometimes phone numbers
How to opt out yourself
Direct opt-out: https://clustrmaps.com/bl/opt-out
- Open https://clustrmaps.com/bl/opt-out in a private window.
- Search your name or address on ClustrMaps to confirm a record exists. Note the URL of your map record.
- Submit the opt-out form with the URL.
- Provide an email address.
- Click the verification link in the email.
- Allow 48 hours for the map pin to drop.
What ClustrMaps knows about you
ClustrMaps does what most people-search sites do — name, address, relatives, age — but presents it on an actual map. Search your name and the result is a satellite view with a pin on your roof. The format is what makes ClustrMaps distinctive and uniquely damaging.
The data sources are public records, property records, and commercial broker feeds. The map overlay is built on top of standard geocoding APIs. The result is a Google-Maps-quality view of where you live tied directly to your name.
Why it matters if you're on the job
For first responders, the map format does damage that text-based broker pages don't. A doxxer pasting a Spokeo result is sharing an address. A doxxer pasting a ClustrMaps URL is sharing a satellite view of your roof with a pin on it. The friction to act on the information drops to zero.
ClustrMaps is one of the higher-priority cleanup targets despite being less mainstream than Spokeo or Whitepages. The exposure mode is more direct.
How to opt out
The opt-out works the standard way — search, copy URL, submit, verify by email. Allow 48 hours for the map pin to drop from the public search.
Steps are in the optOutSteps field above.
How long until you're back
Six months. The data feed re-syncs from public records and broker sources. Property transactions tend to re-list ClustrMaps faster than name-only changes.
What we do that's faster
We file the ClustrMaps opt-out and re-check every two weeks. When you re-list, we file again. Same drill across 200+ broker sites in parallel. On the individual plan, continuous map-pin removal for officers and their families runs across every map-pin broker we track.
Who owns it
ClustrMaps runs two distinct products under one brand: a website-analytics service that generates visitor heatmaps via an embedded tracking script, and a people-search database covering 160M+ Americans. The analytics product is widely embedded by small bloggers and may obscure the data-brokerage business from casual scrutiny. Corporate registration is not publicly identified.
Lawsuits
- NJ Superior Court, Morris County · 2024 · active
Daniel's Law suit, docket MRS-L-000231-24.
Where the data comes from
- Website analyticsEmbedded tracking script on third-party sites — feeds the heatmap product but adjacent to the people-search dataset.
- Public records
- Property records
- Business registrations
Named in incidents
- 20,000 New Jersey officers vs. 118 data brokers — the Daniel's Law class actions (2024)2024-02-13
ClustrMaps is named in the Atlas Daniel's Law sweep covering 20,000+ NJ officers (docket MRS-L-000231-24, Morris County). The map-pin format makes ClustrMaps a particularly direct exposure target.
Doing this for one broker is straightforward. Doing it for 200, on a continuous basis, is what we do.
Run a free scan. No signup.