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Reverse Landline Search

By William Normski

Most of us who are in relationships with a significant other know there is fine line between snooping and finding incriminating evidence in the daily course of our lives. Take the cell phone bill, for example. The cell phone company includes a list of all the numbers called and all of the numbers who called you. If you happen to notice an unfamiliar number on the list in the course of paying the bill or checking your minutes online, does that constitute snooping?

And what about using mobile reverse phone lookup to check information about that number? Does that constitute snooping? While we may disagree on whether or not this would violate your significant other's privacy, the reality is that these services can effectively be used in just this way. Once you've gotten the number from the bill, enter it into the search service, and you'll find out information about the caller or the owner of the number.

Since wireless numbers are not a matter of public record, you won't find these numbers in the free directories. The directories that charge a fee are those that will provide you with all the detailed information you want behind almost any wireless number. They charge a fee because the information they make available to the public is purchased from all the major wireless carriers like Verizon, Nextel, and Sprint.

This information consists of the owner's name, billing address, wireless carrier, previous addresses, names of relatives, and more. So, when you visit your selected reverse lookup site, all you need to do is enter the number you are searching into a toolbar.

If you want to do a reverse landline search, the best idea is always to try out the free sites first then head towards the for-fee sites. However this does not apply to cell phone numbers, for that type of information you normally have to pay a low fee.

Here's an example. A person with poor credit talks to his/her friend and gets a cell phone through the friend's current phone plan. The phone number is going to be associated with the main name on the account which is not the person using that number to place calls. In fact, the two people don't even live under the same roof.

For example, one of the sites starts off their free services by asking you to enter the full ten digit number. That's fine. You have to put in the number or else nothing is ever going to be discovered.

These are the sites that will provide you with all the information you are looking for and more. You can find out the name, address, map location of address, other phone numbers that belong to the owner, previous addresses, and more. The directories obtain their information from databases the public simply doesn't have access to.

In some cases, you won't even have to go that far. They may willingly tell you what you want to know. And, in some cases, they may not know because the caller has dropped out of touch and doesn't want to pay the bill. The bottom line is that you can only find out who owns a phone number not the specific caller. But you can still use that information to get results.

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