This looks like advertising to me.
I wouldn't use the address protection service. It might be legal but I'd be bothered about the potential consequences of keepership being in hands of anyone else but myself as legal owner.
I also don't think it's fair to slate DVLA for doing what, in effect, it's there for. I'm currently arguing a ticket from a London Council. They got, as they're required to, keeper details from DVLA. I've no problem in principle with BPA or other approved organisations being able to access my details. If a car is persistently abusing my Mother's private space at her flat I'd expect DVLA to hand over keeper details. I doubt the £2.50 fee is much of a profit centre. OTOH if some company is abusing the system then DVLA and the ICO should be down on them like a ton of bricks.
As to assistance with appeals then provided you're using skill to present appeals based on actual facts around the infringement then it's a free country and a free market. I am though acutely aware of issues around practices of 'credit repair' companies and would avoid anything similar if it has even the mildest suggestion of playing fast/loose with court etc process. As a retired court officer I find such practices abhorrent.
I note you also provide a service claiming to be able to get debt collectors acting for credit cards, water companies etc off people's backs. Debt collectors are one thing, enforcement officers are another. If you've found a way of seeing off bailiffs with warrants I'm sure a lot of us in the advice sector would like to know how. Personally though, having dealt with Lovells for an assigned debt from a mobile company (not mine - I work in advice sector) I found them utterly professional.
Edited by Bromptonaut on 12/02/2019 at 18:03
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