Protect Your Privacy Online.

Has Your Data Been Shared Without Your Consent?

Hospitals, telehealth apps, financial services, online pharmacies, and other websites often send your sensitive information to third parties through tracking pixels and scripts without your permission, violating state and federal privacy laws. 

Biz Head Law uncovers illegal tracking. We can check if your data was exposed.

Privacy Breaches

How Do Websites Violate My Privacy?

Every day, millions of websites collect, track, and share your personal data without giving you the option to opt out. Websites do this using cookies, tracking pixels, and third-party trackers. Many do so illegally by failing to comply with the 100+ privacy regulations like the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), the California Invasion of Privacy Act (CIPA), and other state and federal privacy laws.

2024 Cost To US Economy
$ 0 B
Data Breaches
0
US Victims In 2024
0

Common Website Cookie Policy Violations

Lack of Prior Consent

Placing cookies before getting your explicit permission.

No Opt Out Options

Making if difficult or impossible to withdraw consent.

Insufficient Transparency

Failing to disclose what data is collected and why.

Deceptive Cookie Banners

Nudging users into agreeing instead of giving a fair choice.

Excessive Data Collection

Asking for unnecessary personal information to manage preferences.

Unauthorized Tracking

For purposes you didn't consent to, like behavioural advertising.

Data Collection Misrepresentation

Adding new cookies, collecting new information, without new consent.

Data Breach Risks

Without your knowledge, your data could be sold, shared or exposed.

How A Privacy Check Works

Secure Upload

Upload your browser history or the specific website URLs you visited. We provide simple instructions and you are in control. Always.

Automated Scan

Our automated tool looks for signs of tracking that may disclose protected or sensitive information. Your data is encrypted and secure.

Results & Next Steps

Your free report will provide indicators of a potential privacy violation. We will contact you to discuss options at no cost or obligation to you.

What Do We Look For?

Privacy breaches come in various forms. Here’s what we look for:

  • Pixels or scripts that send inputs to third parties.
  • Session info or chat tools that capture keystrokes or messages.
  • Signals that could link site visits to a profile.
  • Gaps in cookie notices, consent banners, or privacy policies.
A young man with a beard is working on a laptop at a cozy cafe with warm lighting, holding a coffee cup.

Who Might Qualify For Compensation?

You may qualify for compensation if, in the last 24 months, you:

  • Used a hospital or telehealth site or app.
  • Used a portal to book, message or view results for a private service.
  • Purchased medications online, or used an online pharmacy.
  • Used an online banking portal, credit card company site or payment processor portal.
  • Accessed a credit monitoring service.
  • Filed taxes or shared financial information through an online tax preparation or accounting service.
  • Used an investing, brokerage or wealth management platform to manage or review financial information.
  • Accessed any website with a login page that misrepresented how it collects or shares your data.
  • Have or had a Facebook or Google account or other social media accounts.
How Biz Head Law can help you

How We Can Help In 4 Easy Steps

Biz Head Law specializes in identifying privacy violations and helping you assert your rights.
We offer a free privacy rights violation assessment with a customized report outlining which sites may have violated your rights and explain any legal options, free of charge.

Step 1

Upload your browsing history through our secure and encrypted portal.

Step 2

Our team reviews the data.

Step 3

We provide a customized report showing which sites may have violated your rights.

Step 4

If violations exist, we’ll explain your legal options, free of charge.

FAQs

Is this safe?

Yes. Upload is encrypted. We only scan for technical signals of tracking. You can delete your files at any time by requesting removal from us.

 

No. A Facebook account can increase the chance of linkage, but we can still detect tracking behavior without it.

We look for known tracking pixels, scripts, session replay tools, and network calls that could disclose page context or form activity to third parties.

 

 

No. This free check is informational. If we see indicators of a potential violation, we can discuss your options at no cost or obligation.

A  tracking pixel is a tiny piece of code that websites place on their pages to monitor what users do online. Pixels send information about your activity — such as what pages you visit, what you click, and even what forms you fill out — to third parties like Facebook, Google, or data analytics companies.

While pixels are often used for advertising and marketing, they become a serious problem when placed on websites that handle sensitive personal information.

  • On healthcare sites — such as hospital or telehealth portals, online pharmacies, or patient apps — pixels can transmit details about your medical history, prescriptions, test results, or private communications with your provider. Sharing this kind of information without authorization may violate the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA).
  • On financial services sites — such as online banking portals, credit card dashboards, payment processors, credit monitoring accounts, tax preparation platforms, or investing and wealth management apps — pixels can share information about your financial history, account balances, tax filings, or investment activity.  Unauthorized disclosure of this data may violate consumer protection and privacy laws, including the Gramm–Leach–Bliley Act (GLBA), the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), or the California Invasion of Privacy Act (CIPA).

This type of hidden data sharing isn’t just an invasion of privacy. It can expose consumers to identity theft, targeted advertising based on private health or financial information, unwanted profiling, or even discriminatory lending and insurance practices.

If your healthcare provider or financial institution is using pixels or similar tracking tools on its website or app, your most confidential information could be at risk. Your health and financial data should never be treated as marketing material — and when companies fail to safeguard that trust, they may be violating your privacy rights and you may be entitled to take action..

Your personal information belongs to you.

Take control of your data today. Don't let websites profit off your personal information illegally. Start by requesting your free privacy violation assessment today.
Important Disclosures
  • Attorney Advertising & No Legal Advice
    The information provided on this website constitutes attorney advertising and is for general informational purposes only. It should not be relied upon as legal advice. You should always consult with a qualified attorney regarding your specific situation before taking any action.
  • No Attorney-Client Relationship Created
    Uploading your browsing history or other information through this website does not create an attorney-client relationship with Biz Head Law. An attorney-client relationship is only formed once a formal agreement is signed.
  • How We Use Submitted Data
    Any browsing history or website activity you choose to share with us will be reviewed solely to identify potential privacy violations. We do not use this information for any other purpose, and we do not sell or share it with third parties.
  • Your Confidentiality Matters
    While no relationship is formed until you formally engage our firm, we treat all submissions with care and take reasonable steps to safeguard your information.
  • Joint Representation Notice
    In some cases, Biz Head Law and Almeida Law Group may jointly evaluate or handle certain claims. Any joint involvement will be disclosed and subject to a signed engagement agreement outlining the scope of representation and fee-sharing arrangement, as required by applicable ethical rules.