
Deleting your entire digital footprint from the internet is nearly impossible, but you can use AI to make your data less exposed.
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An X user claims they used Claude to remove their data from 47 data broker listings, delete 12 dead accounts, and bury 3 search results.
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Experts say wiping out the entire digital footprint from the internet is impossible, but AI can send deletion requests and monitor when the data reappears.
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AI can also create a digital footprint removal strategy by prioritizing actions based on risk level.
X user Digital Ghost recently went viral for sharing how they “wiped out” their digital footprint using Claude in just 6 hours.
More specifically, the user claims they removed their data from 47 data broker listings, deleted 12 dead accounts, and buried 3 search results.
First, the user searched for their name, email address, and phone number on Google. They then asked Claude to categorize this data into the one held by data brokers, social media accounts, old accounts, and articles.
The AI agent reportedly sent opt-out requests to data brokers and account-deletion requests to old forums. Moreover, the user says AI was used to bury old articles on Google by creating new ones and pushing them up in search results.
With an average smartphone user generating up to 188 digital footprints every day, many are left vulnerable to having their data handed to brokers. This increases the risk of identity theft, targeted scams, and data breaches.
Just four recent breaches at data brokers have cost Americans more than $20 billion in identity theft, Congress’s Joint Economic Committee revealed in February 2026, following the investigation by CalMatters and the Markup.
While using AI to regain full control of your data may seem like an easy solution, experts warn that automation tools can only be used for ongoing maintenance, not for permanent deletion.
“A snapshot, not the finish line”
Mariano Facundo Scigliano, a cybersecurity and digital rights management expert, says that permanently deleting an entire digital footprint is impossible, and the viral X story is a “snapshot, not the finish line.”
Scigliano explains that data brokers continuously re-scrape public records and buy fresh data, resulting in the same listings typically repopulating within weeks to months. Moreover, data appearing online has already been copied, sold, and mirrored.
“It survives in caches, the Wayback Machine, breached datasets traded on forums, and partner databases you can’t even identify. You can’t take down a system you don't know exists,” Scigliano tells Cybernews.
Requesting that your data be deleted – if you manage to overcome all obstacles placed by data brokers – won’t always yield the desired results.
Data survives in caches, the Wayback Machine, breached datasets traded on forums, and partner databases you can’t even identify. You can’t take down a system you don't know exists
Mariano Facundo Scigliano
A recent preprint study suggests that only 9% of 522 registered data brokers in California are fully compliant with transparency requirements of the Delete Act, which gives citizens the right to have their data removed from over 500 brokers via a single request.
Moreover, 43% of 250 brokers were found to make it impossible for consumers to exercise all privacy rights, while 64% introduce at least one design feature that creates substantial friction in the consumer request process.
Scigliano says identity leaks through correlation, not just direct listings. This means even if the user name is scrubbed, the same device, writing style, photos, or metadata lets a system re-link the user.
Digital footprint deletion efforts may also hit the wall of legal reality, according to Jamshir Qureshi, a vice president of DevSecOps Engineering. Public records, court documents, and legitimate news articles are legally required to be accessible in many countries.
Moreover, Qureshi warns, there’s no way to verify that every copy has been wiped out upon request.
AI is not almighty, but it can help
While options for erasing an entire digital footprint are limited, AI can speed up the process of limiting the exposure of your data.
Scigliano says AI can be used to file hundreds of broker opt-outs and deletion requests under the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA).
In addition, AI tools can conduct continuous monitoring and discovery of where data appears across brokers, breaches, and social sites faster than manual searching.
Qureshi suggests using AI to create a strategy, as it can prioritize actions based on risk, for example, which accounts need immediate password changes and which ones require full deletion.
“While AI can initiate the process for dozens of listings in a matter of hours, many of these removal processes require weeks or months of follow-up and manual verification to ensure the requests are actually honored,” he tells Cybernews.
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The choice of tools matters, too. Scigliano warns against using AI tools that specialize in deleting digital footprints, as they can make users hand over even more personal data and, as he puts it, “widen your footprint to shrink it.”
If you’re not a fan of AI, you may try following Cybernews manual on minimizing your digital footprint and taking measures to prevent your data from being collected.
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