Privacy for military and veterans
Active duty, reserves, retired.
Run a free scan. No signup.Why this matters more for you
Military and veterans face a different exposure profile from cops and firefighters. The threat is often delayed — old deployments, old units, old grudges that surface years after the service was active. For active duty, the family back home is often the more-exposed party because OPSEC is tighter for the service member.
For reserves and Guard, the civilian-life address combined with a known military identity is its own vulnerability. For veterans, the long timeline matters — brokers maintain decades of address history, and old enemies don't reset.
What's actually exposed
Run a scan and the typical service-member profile shows up: name, current address, prior addresses including base housing if applicable, spouse, parents, kids' names. Sometimes the unit affiliation if it appears in any public source.
What law does for you
There's no military-specific law that forces brokers to remove your data. DoD does OPSEC training. That's the ceiling. The civilian protections you do have — the federal DPPA, which limits what state DMVs can release, and state programs — apply to you the same as anyone else.
For veterans, no specific statute applies. The standard broker opt-out path is the leverage.
What we do
Continuous sweeping of 200+ broker sites. We sweep the family the same way. Re-listings handled — we re-check every two weeks.
If your unit, your veterans' organization, or your local wants to cover members at scale, reach out.