How Is MyLife.com Even Allowed to Exist?

Deletemyinfo mylife

You might wonder: “How can a site like MyLife.com just gather all this personal info and show it off?” The short answer is: because much of what it uses is publicly available — and because the legal ground is weirdly permissive in many places.

Let’s break it down in everyday terms.

How Is The Website MyLife.Com Allowed To Function?

What MyLife.com Does

MyLife is a “public records aggregator + reputation platform.” It scours the internet, public databases, court records, social media, and more to build profiles on people.

Here’s what usually shows up:

  • Names, addresses (past & present)

  • Phone numbers and emails (if publicly available)

  • Employment history, education, and personal bios

  • Court records, criminal data, judgments

  • Reputation scores or “Trust” indexes

They package it all into a “profile” that others can search — sometimes without your consent or awareness.

Why It’s Legal (Even If It Feels Creepy)

You’re probably asking: “Wait, so they can just scoop up my data and publish it?” It’s legal—here’s why:

  1. Public records are fair game
    A lot of the documents MyLife uses are by law public—court filings, property deeds, business registrations. Anyone can access them in principle.

  2. They don’t have to verify everywhere
    Because they’re aggregating, they often don’t dig deep to confirm everything. They rely on “what’s out there” — which means errors, outdated data, or mixed identities slip in.

  3. Terms, disclaimers & ambiguous “consent”
    MyLife’s terms of service typically reserve broad rights to collect, display, and license data. Sometimes users agree to things without realizing it (via signups elsewhere, data brokers, or partner sites).

  4. Loopholes in privacy laws
    Many jurisdictions allow this kind of data collection as long as it’s via public or semi-public sources. And there’s often no requirement to ask permission ahead of time.

  5. “Opt-out” is allowed, not automatic
    The law rarely forces MyLife to delete your profile outright. Instead, they provide a way for you to request removal. You have to initiate it.

Where Things Get Messy — And What to Watch Out For

  • Misinformation or mismatches
    Because MyLife isn’t always verifying, you might see info that’s outdated or belongs to someone else with a similar name.

  • Reappearance is possible
    Even if you successfully remove your profile, MyLife (or its data suppliers) may re-pull your data later if it’s out there again.

  • Your “reputation score” is opaque
    They’ll show a “Trust Score” or rating — but the algorithm behind it is usually hidden. You don’t always know why you got the score you got.

  • Data licensing & resale
    MyLife may license or share some profiles, or let partners query their databases, which spreads your data further.

  • The “free look” trap
    They often lure you in with a free preview and then prompt you to subscribe for the “full report.” That upsell can be confusing or feel manipulative.

What You Can Do About It — And How DeleteMyInfo Fits In

Seeing your name plastered on MyLife can feel disempowering. But you do have options.

  • Request removal / opt-out
    MyLife has a process to request that they remove your profile or suppress it. It usually involves filling out a form, verifying identity, and waiting.

    READ: How to Remove Information from MyLife.com

  • Keep track & re-check
    After removal, revisit your name periodically. If something comes back, file a new request.

  • Control upstream sources
    Try to limit how much personal data you post publicly elsewhere. Review privacy settings on social media, limit directory listings, etc.

  • Use a privacy service (like DeleteMyInfo)
    Doing all this manually across dozens of sites is exhausting. DeleteMyInfo:

    • Tracks your profiles across many data brokers (MyLife included)

    • Handles opt-out/ removal requests for you

    • Monitors to catch reappearances

    • Reduces clutter so you don’t have to chase every company yourself

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
Reddit
Tumblr
Skype
Telegram
Pocket
WhatsApp
Email
Digg

Hundreds of companies collect and sell your private data online. DeleteMyInfo removes it for you.

Related Articles :

Find out which DATA BROKERS sell your Personal Information!

Logo

Your message has been sent. Thank you for contacting us, we’ll get back to you as soon as we can.