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ELECTION WORKERS

Your home address is exposed online. We're removing it.

Your name being public is part of the job. Your home address being public is not — and it's what Delist removes. We find every site that lists it and start taking it down, for you and your household, on autopilot.

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Home address removal Family coverage in one plan Continuous re-listing detection CCPA/GDPR legal requests Encrypted, access-controlled

Your exposed data is the supply chain for harassment

Harassment of election workers has run at elevated rates since 2020, through regular cycles, special elections, and recounts. Most of it traces back to the same place: a home address on a people-search site. That address is the piece of the picture you can remove. Delist finds it, files the removals, and keeps filing as brokers re-add it.

Brokers collect your address independently of your employer

People-search sites pull home address data from property records, voter rolls, and commercial feeds — none of which your employer controls. That's why having a work title doesn't protect your home. Removing the address from broker sites is the highest-impact step you can take.

Most of a dox starts on people-search sites

Coordinated harassment campaigns since 2020 lean on the same open broker sites anyone can search. Removing your home address from those sites cuts off the easiest source they pull from.

Swatting has reached state officials

Coordinated swatting hit state Secretaries of State on Christmas Day 2023 and 2024. These attacks start with a home address pulled from a public source. Removing yours takes away that starting point.

Your family is the soft entry point

Attackers who can't reach you directly often target spouses, parents, or adult children. Brokers link records by shared address, so removing only your data leaves your household exposed through their listings.

The free scan shows exactly which sites are publishing your address today.

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How Delist removes your personal information from the internet

1

Find the sites that publish your address

The free scan covers the data brokers, people-search sites, and aggregators we track. You see exactly which sites surface your home address tied to your name.

2

File removals across the broker sites

We submit opt-out and deletion requests to each site, automate the verification flows, and escalate under CCPA and GDPR when a broker misses a legal deadline.

3

Cover the family on one plan

Spouses, adult children, and household members in the same flow. Brokers link records by shared address — the household is the unit of protection.

4

Watch continuously for re-listings

Brokers re-add your data within 30-90 days as new feeds come in. We catch it and re-submit automatically without waiting for the next election to remind you to check.

Manual opt-outs don't hold — brokers re-add your data within weeks

Manual opt-outsGeneric privacy toolsDelist.ai
Sites covered10-20 (if you find the time)50-200Brokers, AI, search, dark web
Family coverageRepeat for each personVariesFamily plans
Re-listing detectionYou notice it yourselfPeriodicContinuous
Pre-emptive vs reactiveReactive (after first incident)MixedPre-emptive
Legal deletion requestsDraft and send yourselfRarelyCCPA/GDPR
Time investmentHours per month foreverSetup + check-insFully managed

Common questions from election workers

Yes, at materially elevated rates compared to pre-2020. Documented cases include the sustained doxxing of Fulton County, Georgia workers Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss following the 2020 election; a wave of swatting against Secretaries of State on Christmas Day 2023 and 2024; and harassment of county election supervisors during every cycle since 2020. The threats persist for years after the specific election that triggered them.
Home address. Your name is already public — that's a feature of fair elections. The home address is the multiplier that turns name into target. Removing your address from broker sites is the single most impactful privacy action you can take in this role.
Most states have ACPs for victims of stalking, domestic violence, and sexual assault. Coverage for election workers specifically is uneven — some states (Washington, Oregon, California, Maine, and several others) have expanded ACPs to cover election workers explicitly after 2020. Check your state's ACP administrator or Secretary of State office.
Yes. Family plans cover spouses, adult children, and other household members. This matters specifically for election workers because attackers often go after family members when they can't reach the target directly. Brokers link records by shared address — removing only your data leaves the household exposed through your spouse's profile.
Yes, in part. Removing your data from brokers now stops the open-web spread. Posts and conspiracy theories about you that were published during your role tend to persist on the platforms where they were posted, but they slowly de-rank in search results once new data isn't feeding them. Delist's continuous monitoring catches new appearances even years later.

Start removing your personal information from the internet today

The free scan shows what's exposed right now. We start removing it, and we keep removing it when brokers re-add it. Family plans cover the whole household in one step.

Start your free scan
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