Updated: 10 June 2026
The anonymous websites centralniregistrdluzniku.cz and protikorupcnilinka.cz publish automatically generated “profiles” and articles that spread distorted and, in places, false information about our company — including the label “fraud” and references to the Criminal Code that rest on no court decision. We therefore set out the facts and verifiable sources — organised by which website they concern. Judge for yourself.
About the company
datlok s.r.o., Company ID 14304511, registered office Korunní 2569/108, 101 00 Prague, is a Czech company entered in the Commercial Register since 2022. We work in AI automation, multi-agent systems and custom software development. The managing director and sole owner is Ing. Petr Štěpán. We are a duly traceable company with a real registered office and management.
Setting the facts straight
The claims these websites spread about our company are false. In particular, the label “fraud” and the references to the Criminal Code are false — our company is not and has not been criminally prosecuted, and no court has found any criminal offence.
These criminalising claims rest on no court decision. The only basis they invoke is a request for an investigation, filed by a third party from this same circle — that is, a submission by our opponents themselves. No court decision confirming the “fraud” allegation exists, and these websites cite none; they merely cross-reference one another.
The Office for Personal Data Protection (ÚOOÚ) has not opened any investigation or proceedings against our company; the claim that “ÚOOÚ has launched an investigation” is false.
Judge for yourself how much weight a criminal accusation carries when its sole basis is a complaint its own promoters filed themselves — and which no court has confirmed.
Who is behind these websites
The profiles and articles about our company are produced by two interlinked, anonymously operated websites. In their footers they claim a foreign entity (ISR LLC, North Bay Village, Florida, USA) and cross-reference one another as a single network. They are neither official state registries nor independent media — the official anti-corruption hotline in the Czech Republic is run by the Ministry of the Interior. Below is what Czech authorities and reputable media have documented about each of these websites (quotes are kept verbatim in Czech).
protikorupcnilinka.cz
An anonymously operated website posing as an “anti-corruption hotline”. The Office for Personal Data Protection found the data processing by its operator (Protikorupcnilinka.cz s.r.o.) unlawful; Czech media have also flagged its unclear operator:
„Zpracování osobních údajů je tedy v této podobě nezákonné, neboť porušuje § 5 odst. 2 zákona č. 101/2000 Sb.“
Úřad pro ochranu osobních údajů — kontrola subjektu Protikorupcnilinka.cz s.r.o. · Source
„Pozor na Protikorupcnilinka.cz: Nejasný provozovatel a riziko zneužití dat.“
Život v Česku (17. 11. 2024) · Source
centralniregistrdluzniku.cz
A website listed by the Czech Trade Inspection Authority on its register of risky websites. It operates under the “Central Register of Debtors” brand, which creates the impression of an official state registry; Czech authorities and media have warned against this brand for years and the data protection authority made its website inaccessible:
„Z výše uvedených důvodů považuje úřad stránky za rizikové.“
Česká obchodní inspekce — seznam „Rizikové weby“ (6. 8. 2019) · Source
„Česká obchodní inspekce varuje před využíváním služeb tzv. Centrálního registru dlužníků České republiky.“
Česká obchodní inspekce (9. 8. 2018) · Source
„ÚOOÚ se podařilo znepřístupnit webové stránky Centrálního registru dlužníků, avšak provozovatel si zajistil nového poskytovatele služeb – indickou společnost hostující v Ruské federaci.“
Česká justice (14. 8. 2020) · Source
„Za peníze si tady můžete koupit certifikát o své bezdlužnosti, když ale přijdete do banky, zjistíte, že má nulovou váhu.“
Česká televize, Reportéři ČT — „Registr dlužníků poškozuje bezúhonné“ (13. 12. 2010) · Source
„Centrální registr dlužníků klame lidi. Jeho dokumenty banky neuznávají, úřady na něj ale nemůžou.“
Hospodářské noviny · Source
„Centrální registr dlužníků vydává bezcenné papíry. Klame dál.“
Aktuálně.cz · Source
„Falešné registry s reálnými poplatky — takové registry vyvolávají mylný dojem oficiálnosti.“
dTest — „Falešné registry s reálnými poplatky“ (2024) · Source
No Czech bank cooperates with these “registries”, and the “certificates of no debt” they issue are recognised by no financial institution.
Conclusion
In short: the accusations about our company are spread by two anonymously operated websites run from abroad, which themselves pose as a “registry” and an “anti-corruption hotline” to create the impression of an official state institution. One of them — centralniregistrdluzniku.cz — is listed by the Czech Trade Inspection Authority on its register of risky websites, stating verbatim „považuje úřad stránky za rizikové“ (the authority considers the site risky); the Office for Personal Data Protection found the data processing in this network unlawful, and the same brand has been criticised by the media for years.
In other words: parties that publicly accuse others of dishonesty are themselves on an authority’s list of risky websites, face its fine and a ruling that their data processing was unlawful. We label no one in our own words — we present verifiable sources and direct links. Judge for yourself.