# Redacta Blog

Guides and product notes about personal data exposure, people-search removals, data brokers, and practical privacy operations.

- [What to Remove From People-Search Sites First](https://redacctacom.vercel.app/markdown/blog/what-to-remove-from-people-search-sites-first): A practical priority order for reducing the personal details that create the most risk when they appear on public people-search sites.
- [California DROP and the Delete Act: What Data Broker Deletion Actually Covers](https://redacctacom.vercel.app/markdown/blog/california-drop-delete-act-data-broker-removal): California DROP gives residents a central way to request data broker deletion in 2026, but people-search cleanup still needs source checks and monitoring.
- [Deletion vs. De-Indexing: Why Google Removal Is Not the Same as Internet Removal](https://redacctacom.vercel.app/markdown/blog/deletion-vs-deindexing-google-personal-info): Removing personal information from Google can reduce exposure, but source deletion and search-result de-indexing solve different privacy problems.
- [People-Search Opt-Outs in Practice: How to Remove Records and Track Reappearances](https://redacctacom.vercel.app/markdown/blog/people-search-opt-out-guide): A practical people-search opt-out workflow for finding broker profiles, submitting removals, documenting proof, and catching records when they return.
- [After the National Public Data Breach: A Practical Cleanup Plan](https://redacctacom.vercel.app/markdown/blog/national-public-data-breach-cleanup): A step-by-step plan for reducing public exposure, freezing credit, and documenting cleanup after the National Public Data breach.
- [Doxxing Prevention Starts With Ordinary Data](https://redacctacom.vercel.app/markdown/blog/doxxing-prevention-remove-home-address-online): Home addresses, relatives, phone numbers, and public records can become a doxxing risk. Here is what to remove first and how to document cleanup.
