data broker directory
How to Opt Out of Epsilon Data Management
Epsilon Data Management is registered as a data broker with the State of California. Under the CCPA/CPRA (and the Delete Act) you can demand it delete your personal information and stop selling it — even if you aren't a California resident, most brokers process requests from anyone.
Opt out directly at Epsilon Data Management →The broker's own opt-out instructions
There are 2 methods by which a consumer may submit an opt-out of a sale request or other request under the CCPA: #1 - By phone, a consumer may call 1 (866)267-3861. #2 - By webform, a consumer may complete a form online at https://legal.epsilon.com/dsr . If a consumer moves or changes their name after opting out or after requesting to be deleted from the Epsilon database, they will need to submit a new request using their new name and/or address.
What it says it collects
✗ Data on minors✗ Account logins / security codes✗ Government ID numbers✗ Citizenship / immigration status✗ Union membership✗ Sexual orientation✗ Gender identity✗ Biometric data✗ Precise geolocation✓ Reproductive health data
Who it sold or shared data with (past year)
- a foreign actor
Its 2024 privacy-request numbers (self-reported)
| Deletion requests received | 4,985 |
| — complied in whole | 2,691 |
| — complied in part | 0 |
| — denied | 2,294 |
| Median days to respond | 2 |
| Opt-out-of-sale requests received | 87,942 |
| — complied in whole | 87,942 |
| — denied | 0 |
Note: by its own filing, Epsilon Data Management denied 46% of the deletion requests it received in 2024.
Contact
www.epsilon.com · [email protected]
There are 500+ registered data brokers. Paid services like Incogni and DeleteMe submit and chase removal requests for you across hundreds of brokers at once. Our comparison of data-removal services →
Source: California Data Broker Registry (CPPA) — self-reported filings, retrieved 2026-07-18. Request statistics are the broker's own reported 2024 CCPA numbers. Blank items mean the broker did not answer that question, not "no."