Disappearing Act

How to disappear completely

24 November 11

It seems you can’t move in today’s world without leaving a digital footprint. The good news is that escaping the panopticon doesn’t have to mean living in a cave in Tora Bora. Frank Ahearn, a former skip-tracer and the author of How To Disappear, reveals how to pull off the ultimate vanishing act.

Incorporate Yourself
“The beauty of corporations, whether in the US, Canada, Caribbean, UK, Guernsey or Jersey, is that they offer privacy,” says Ahearn. A corporation lets you conduct business affairs anonymously. Utilities, property and other essentials can be leased in the company’s name.

Learn to live off the grid
When you upload info to social networks, you grant them rights to share that data. “If you want to remain anonymous you can’t rely on third-party entities,” he says. Share images on your own password-protected website, and use Skype or email to stay in touch with friends.

Create an army of doppelgängers
To throw stalkers off the scent, Ahearn buys 30 different domains containing variations of his client’s name and creates an individual social network for each one. He then splices real information about each client with misinformation about their location and activities.

Engineer your own identity
Open a bank account and deposit a few hundred pounds. Send the card to a friend in a different city and have them spend in small increments. If your bank statements fall into the wrong hands, says Ahearn, “They’ll find those supermarkets and search in the wrong place”.

Switch your contact details
Before you disconnect your services, switch the contact number they have on file for a police department’s on the other side of the UK. If a stalker manages to get hold of it, they’ll flag themselves up to the police. Make sure friends and work colleagues know not to give out your details.<

Pack your bags
Choose where you can lead a normal life. “If you’re a small-town English girl, you might find it difficult to disappear in London. Everyone wants the palm trees and beachfront life-style, but they can’t always have it.” Forget the beach hut in Goa: think two-bedroom flat in Oldham.

for more, go to:   http://www.wired.co.uk/magazine/archive/2011/12/how-to/disappear-competely

Is Sustainable Living A Crime in the UK?

Injunction to move by the end the of month

A COUPLE living an “off-grid” lifestyle say they face prison unless they move from their own land in Willand and return to an existence in the benefits trap.

Stig and Dinah Mason bought Muxbeare Orchard after a sudden windfall allowed them to quit their impoverished lives on a Hertfordshire council estate two years ago.

  1. Dinah and Stig Mason with sons Yosse, 8, and Dahli, 9, and Moo the dog at their lorry home    MARCUS THOMPSON EXMT20110614F-003_C

    Dinah and Stig Mason with sons Yosse, 8, and Dahli, 9, and Moo the dog at their lorry home MARCUS THOMPSON EXMT20110614F-003_C

The Masons have transformed what they described as a derelict four-acre plot into a haven of self-sufficiency boasting a 400 sq m allotment, a polytunnel and greenhouses to grow fruit and vegetables, chickens for egg production and an orchard they have regenerated by planting around 14 new apple trees of various species.

The couple, who have two boys, aged eight and nine, say because they moved onto the site in order to work the land, Mid Devon District Council is turfing them off as officers do not consider them to be conserving an agricultural area.

They faced magistrates on March 31 when they were served with an injunction to leave within 28 days from June 1.

Dinah, 35, who spent a year with her husband clearing four-foot high nettles and thistles which engulfed the four-acre site, said: “How anybody can say the orchard was being conserved before is beyond my comprehension.”

Dinah works while Stig, 34, as well as making sure the children get to school on time, tends to the land on a daily basis where peas, potatoes, garlic, strawberries, raspberries and various produce have been growing since 2009.

to read more, go to:    http://www.thisisdevon.co.uk/Injunction-end-month/story-12812676-detail/story.html