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DataBreach.com Emerges as Alternative to HaveIBeenPwned
PCMag: “Have I Been Pwned has long been
one of the most useful ways to learn if your
personal information was exposed in a hack.
But a new site offers its own powerful tool to
help you check if your data has been
leaked to cybercriminals. DataBreach.com
is the work of a New Jersey company
called Atlas Privacy, which helps
consumers remove their personal
information from data brokers and people
search websites.
On Wednesday, the company told us
it had launched DataBreach.com as an alternative
to Have I Been Pwned, which is mainly searchable via the
user’s email address. DataBreach.com is designed to
do that and more. In addition to your email address,
the site features an advanced search function to see
whether your full name, physical address, phone number,
Social Security number, IP address, or username are in
Atlas Privacy’s extensive library of recorded breaches.
More categories will also be added over time.
Atlas Privacy has been offering its paid services
to customers, such as police officers and celebrities,
to protect bad actors from learning their
addresses or phone numbers. In doing so,
the company has also amassed over 17.5 billion
records from the numerous stolen databases
circulating on the internet, including in
cybercriminal forums. As a public service,
Atlas is now using its growing repository of
stolen records to create a breach notification site,
free of charge. DataBreach.com builds off
Atlas’s effort in August to host a site notifying
users whether their Social Security number and
other personal information were leaked in the
National Public Data hack. Importantly, Atlas
designed DataBreach.com to prevent it from
storing or collecting any sensitive user
information typed into the site. Instead,
the site will fetch a hash from Atlas’ servers,
or a fingerprint of the user’s personal information
— whether it be an email address, name, or SSN
— and compare it to whatever the user is
searching for. “The comparison will be done locally,”
meaning it’ll occur on the user’s PC or phone, rather
than Atlas’s internet server, de Saint Meloir said.”