19 February, 2026
Google Enhances Privacy Tools to Monitor and Remove Government ID Info from Search
In a major privacy update, Google has broadened its “Results About You” feature to help people detect and manage the appearance of their government-issued identification details in search results. This change is designed to make it easier for users to find and request removal of sensitive personal information – such as passport numbers, driver’s licenses, and Social Security identifiers – that may appear on public websites and get indexed by Google Search.
Understanding how indexing works in modern AI-driven systems is crucial, especially as discussed in our article on how LLM visibility and indexing influence search results.
The “Results About You” tool was already helping users keep tabs on the visibility of contact details like phone numbers, email addresses, and home addresses in search listings. Now, with the expansion to include government ID numbers, the feature provides another layer of control over highly sensitive data that cannot be easily changed if exposed.
To use the updated feature, users can go to the Google app, tap their profile photo, and select “Results About You.” New users will be guided through a setup process where they can enter the personal ID numbers they want Google to monitor. Those already using the tool can add additional IDs right away. Once entered, Google will continuously scan search results for potential matches and notify the user if their information shows up.
Google says the expanded tool uses the company’s standard security and encryption systems to protect the submitted information. However, the company also notes that removing a result from its search index doesn’t erase the data from the internet completely – the content may still exist on the original website, and users may need to contact those sites directly for full removal.
That’s why structured content and visibility control matter more than ever in AI search environments, as we explain in our guide on optimizing content for AI search systems.
The rollout of this feature is beginning in the United States, with a broader global launch expected in the future. Privacy advocates see this as an important step in helping individuals manage the way personal identifiers appear online, since government ID numbers are tied to identity in ways that phone numbers or email addresses are not.
This shift reflects the broader transformation from traditional rankings to AI-driven visibility, something we discussed in our guide on the shift from performance SEO to demand SEO.
As online privacy concerns continue to grow, tools like this represent a shift toward giving users more control over the footprint of their personal information on the web. Still, experts caution that search engine de-indexing is only one part of the solution, and users should be proactive about overall data hygiene across platforms.
With ongoing algorithm changes and privacy-focused updates, businesses must stay ahead of Google’s evolving ecosystem – especially in light of recent updates covered in our analysis of the latest Google core update.




