Anonymous stalking
Anonymous stalkers know about you. You don't know about them. Brokers are the asymmetric advantage.
Run a free scan. No signup.What this is
Anonymous stalking is the pattern where you don't know who's watching. You may notice the signals — packages opened, unfamiliar cars on the street, social media accounts that follow you and then disappear, family members getting strange contacts. You don't have a name to attach to it.
The stalker pulls your information from the same broker pages anyone else can access. They have the asymmetric advantage: they know you, you don't know them. Most of the practical surveillance work — your address, your routine, your family — is sourced from broker pages, social media, and public records.
Why first responders catch this more
Anonymous stalking of officers often traces back to a defendant's network — friends or family of someone the officer arrested or testified against. The stalker may never identify themselves. The officer may never know who's behind it.
For judges and prosecutors, the pattern is similar — a defendant's affiliates hold a grudge and one of them watches. The legal system is full of cases where this surfaces only after years, when the stalker eventually does something that produces a warrant.
What we sweep that prevents the chain
We file opt-outs across 200+ broker sites and re-check every two weeks. For anonymous stalking, the broker cleanup is often the only upstream protection that works — there's no name to file a restraining order against, no relationship to terminate.
Removing your data from broker pages doesn't eliminate the stalking. It does raise the cost. A stalker who could pull your address in 30 seconds now has to do real work. Some of them give up.