You have the right to privacy. Yet most services that promise to help you exercise that right are compromised from the start. They either charge you money to access what should be a fundamental right, or worse — they serve the very companies you're trying to opt out of.
This conflict of interest isn't theoretical. When a service takes money from both individuals seeking privacy and the companies collecting their data, whose interests come first? The answer becomes clear when you look at who's actually paying the bills.
Take SayMine, for example. While helping individuals send data deletion requests, they reportedly also provide tools to companies to handle those same requests — with companies, not individuals, as their paying customers. When your advocate is on both sides of the table, you're not truly represented.
We believe that exercising your right to privacy should be easy and free. That's why our service is both. We are independent, do not sell your personal information, and are funded by your donations. Our code is open source, so you can verify exactly how we operate.
But being free isn't enough. Unlike competitors that only send data deletion requests and hope for the best, we follow through. When a company fails to comply with your request, we escalate your case to the relevant national regulator. This isn't an empty promise — our complaint filing process to the regulator is fully automated.
Here's how it works: After you send a data request through our service, we track the response. Did the company comply? Did they ignore you? Did they only partially honor your request? Based on elapsed time and the company's response, we recommend when an escalation is due. If you choose to escalate, we automatically generate and send an email to the regulator on your behalf.
This matters because companies know there are consequences. A request backed by potential regulatory action carries real weight. You're not just asking — you're asserting your legal rights with enforcement mechanisms ready to deploy.
Many organizations collect and sell your personal data, often without your consent. Data brokers are a key enabler of the growing loss of privacy and rampant surveillance capitalism. Fighting back shouldn't cost you money, and your advocate shouldn't have divided loyalties.
If this sounds complicated, please don't worry — we can help. Start by searching for an organization below. Send your request. We'll track the response and let you know if escalation is needed. Every step is designed to be simple and action-oriented.
We believe in a world where individuals, not corporations or governments, are first-class citizens of the digital domain. That world requires tools that serve only you — not tools that play both sides. Your privacy advocate should have one loyalty: to your rights. That's what independence means, and that's what we deliver.