Press Reviews
I could have found this information using a search engine like Google, but I would have had to know what I was looking for, and would probably have had to sift through dozens of Web pages. [more]
[From Article 1] People are uncovering surprising details about colleagues, lovers and strangers that often don’t turn up in a simple Internet search. [more]
[From Article 2] Spokeo Inc., a Mountain View start-up that allows users to track their friends’ activity on various sites, has changed its site to more quickly reflect people’s privacy settings on other sites. [more]
[From Article 1] Spokeo is designed to let you dig up information on friends, foes, and anyone in between. Spokeo goes a step farther than many of the other services, though, by importing your entire e-mail address book. [more]
[From Article 2] Don’t look now, but you’re being watched. And now that I’ve signed up for Spokeo.com, I could be the one watching you. [more]
[From Article 1] What makes Spokeo compelling, at least initially, is that it is dead-simple to set up. I tried this with my Gmail account, and it built up a friend reader with more than 500 contacts in less than three minutes [more]
[From Article 2] Spokeo combines the top 20 social networking destinations with any RSS feeds you like into one glimpse through a multimedia RSS reader. [more]
Stanford professor, Hiam Mendelson, says technology brings new concerns, but doesn’t see any ethical problems with spokeo. [more]
A new type of search engine making people’s personal information easier to access [more]
Spokeo is an outstanding all-in-one online tracker that helps you follow-up on your friends’ online activities by keeping track of their profiles across all major social networks, blog networks and photo sharing websites [more]
In a tiny office in Mountain View, this could be the next big thing on the Internet. [more]
Spokeo finds information about your friends—long-lost or not—and then tracks their online activities as they make updates. These friends don’t have to “invite” you, approve your friend “request,” or be a member of Spokeo [more]
It might surprise you to see just how easy it is for someone to assemble a picture of your Internet footprint with only an email address. [more]
You can track many people across several social-networking sites. Use a social network aggregator like Spokeo. [more]
You don’t have to invite anyone, approve anyone, or really do much of anything. Getting all your contacts set up is as simple as providing your email address and password, and Spokeo will import your contacts [more]
Spokeo.com will let you know what everyone in your email contact list is up to on more than 40 social networking sites. [more]
Spokeo now sees itself as a kind of RSS reader for social networks: read all your friend’s updates in one location in a system akin to the Facebook feed [more]
Spokeo does a very useful thing: It takes data feeds from multiple social networks that you participate in (such as MySpace, Xanga, and so forth), and gives you one overview page where you can see what’s up with all your buddies’ pages. [more]
Spokeo.com, one of the newest sites dedicated to snooping on your friends. [more]
Personal information is readily available from many online sources. It just takes a little know-how and creativity to find it. [more]
Spokeo uses online address book contacts to track personal activity on the Internet, from blogs to file share services including Facebook and MySpace. Even random photos posted years ago on Flickr could pop up in seconds. [more]
















