Reply
Valued Contributor
Posts: 994
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

Wondering if anyone has used this. It only states an email scan.

Super Contributor
Posts: 407
Registered: ‎03-10-2010

Yep, used it and when you get to the end, they want to charge you for the info.

Valued Contributor
Posts: 994
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

@poppinfresh  This is supposed to be free. That's pathetic. I guess I'll pass.

Super Contributor
Posts: 407
Registered: ‎03-10-2010

I know...I felt the same way. They tell you your email is out there, but then they want $$ to tell you where. Your right...pathetic

 

Honored Contributor
Posts: 17,606
Registered: ‎06-27-2010

Re: Experian Dark Web Scan

[ Edited ]

 

            No.  Absolutely not.  I think it's dangerously deceptive, self-serving (for Experian) advertising and causes more problems for those who use it.   Remember, we are not the customers of credit reporting agencies -- we are their product, their merchandise.

 

            There are many articles on the internet.   Here are excerpts from one that I think does a good job of explaining what really happens to those who accept this "free" scan:

 

 

" ...The search box makes a stab at transparency by stating that inputting your email means you’re giving Experian permission to pitch its own products as well as “other products that may be of interest.”

 

It also says you’re agreeing to Experian’s terms of service.

 

But that hardly comes close to a full disclosure of what’s transpiring.   I clicked on Experian’s terms of service and found a densely written, nearly 17,600-word document — a contract the length of a novella.

 

Not surprisingly, this is where you’ll find an arbitration clause preventing you from suing the company — an increasingly common aspect of consumer contracts nowadays.

 

That’s the least of your worries, though.

 

It turns out running a free dark-Web email scan opens you up to “advertisements or offers for available credit cards, loan options, financial products or services, or credit-related products or services and other offers to customers.”

 

It also exposes you to “the ability to track and collect certain consumer information specific to you,” including your credit score, loan and credit card payments, and interest rates.

 

The terms reveal that Experian “receives compensation for the marketing of credit opportunities or other products or services available through third parties,” which is exactly what it sounds like.

 

You’re giving permission for the company to sell you out.

 

And if you make it to the very bottom of the contract — no small feat, I assure you — you’ll find this little cow chip: Even if you cancel any Experian service, your acceptance of the arbitration clause “shall survive.”

 

For the rest of your natural life? That seems to be the presumption.

 

Claudia Kubowicz Malhotra, an associate professor of marketing at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said two big problems with Experian’s pitch are that no one will read 17,600 words of fine print and that relatively few consumers have the slightest idea what the dark Web is... "

 

please see the entire article at:

 

http:// www . latimes . com/business/lazarus/la-fi-lazarus-experian-dark-web-20170922-story.html 

 

(remove spaces to copy and paste the URL or search for "Credit agency Experian says it can protect you from the 'dark Web' — sort of" at LATimes dot com)

 

Few things reveal your intellect and your generosity of spirit—the parallel powers of your heart and mind—better than how you give feedback.~Maria Popova
Trusted Contributor
Posts: 1,602
Registered: ‎03-21-2010

@poppinfresh wrote:

Yep, used it and when you get to the end, they want to charge you for the info.


Yeah, and they probably scare people to death that their information is out there..even if it isn’t. 

 

Granted stuff is out there, which is why you have to change passwords frequently, PIN numbers, and be vigilant about password scanners on ATM machines. 

Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 5,934
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

Gee. What are the chances of them finding something?!  100%

 

Then pay a fee for them to "monitor". 

Honored Contributor
Posts: 14,917
Registered: ‎03-09-2010
  • @dooBdoo thanks for doing all of the investigative work for us.I really appreciate your hard work.I think I will take your advice and steer clear.
Respected Contributor
Posts: 2,847
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

@dex wrote:
  • @dooBdoo thanks for doing all of the investigative work for us.I really appreciate your hard work.I think I will take your advice and steer clear.

I agree.  Why give them more information.  They already have it, lol

Respected Contributor
Posts: 2,187
Registered: ‎03-13-2010

I have seen the advertisements but we've all seen how Equifax's original attempt was found to scam anyone who signed up for the "free monitoring" and when caught, they lied and changed their story. 

 

I'm always leary of all these "free" things and start with the premise that they are all nothing but sheisters.