Security & Compliance · Data PrivacystructuralB2CUser FeedbackNotificationsMarketplace

Lead Generation Platforms Selling Consumer Data Beyond Stated Intent

When consumers submit contact information to home services marketplaces (e.g., Angi/HomeAdvisor) to request a limited number of contractor quotes, their data is distributed far beyond what they consented to, resulting in dozens of unsolicited calls daily from unrelated or unqualified vendors. The platform's business model appears to monetize lead data broadly rather than matching consumers with only the contractors they selected. This creates a significant trust and consent violation that persists even after consumers request removal, suggesting the data distribution is already out of the platform's direct control.

3mentions
1sources
5.85

Signal

Visibility

7

Leverage

Impact

Sign in free to unlock the full scoring breakdown, root-cause analysis, and solution blueprint.

Sign up free

Already have an account? Sign in

Deep Analysis

Root causes, cross-domain patterns, and opportunity mapping

Sign up free to read the full analysis — no credit card required.

Already have an account? Sign in

Solution Blueprint

Tech stack, MVP scope, go-to-market strategy, and competitive landscape

Sign up free to read the full analysis — no credit card required.

Already have an account? Sign in

Similar Problems

surfaced semantically
Security & Compliance87% match

Angi Shares Consumer Phone Numbers With Hundreds of Contractors Without Meaningful Consent

Angi distributes customer phone numbers to a vast network of contractors upon a single search request, generating dozens to hundreds of unsolicited calls per day for weeks. This mass phone number sharing without adequate consent disclosure violates consumer privacy expectations and causes severe quality-of-life disruption. It reflects a structural business model conflict between lead monetization and consumer protection.

Customer Experience82% match

Angi Home Services Spams Users After Signup With No Local Contractor Results

After signing up on Angi users are bombarded with emails texts and calls from a call center with the only contractor result being 50+ miles away. The aggressive contact after data collection feels deceptive given the lack of useful local matches. Users report being unable to stop the spam even after blocking numbers.

Security & Compliance82% match

Home Services Platforms Sell User Contact Data to Third-Party Callers

Users who request quotes on home service platforms are bombarded by unsolicited insurance and sales calls from third parties. Contact data entered for service estimates is monetized without user awareness. This data-resale practice undermines user trust and consent norms.

Marketing & Growth81% match

Angi service-pro leads are recycled and prospects rarely answer

Service pros paying high subscriptions to Angi say leads are recycled across competitors, contact numbers are wrong, and most prospects never pick up. Customer service offers no remediation.

Security & Compliance81% match

Lead Platforms Sell Consumer Data Without Meaningful Consent

Home service platforms sell user contact information to vendors after a single inquiry, resulting in years of unsolicited calls with no effective opt-out. Users have no visibility into how their data is shared or sold, exposing a structural data privacy gap in consumer marketplace platforms.

Problem descriptions, scores, analysis, and solution blueprints may be updated as new community data becomes available.