I'll say this again. You can pass 100% until a ->-bleeped-<- ->-bleeped-<- looks for you online. Only recently did I post a couple of pictures of me here on this board. I'm out to pretty much everyone, live androgynous, and haven't even transitioned yet. That's not the point. Anyone with enough time on their hands can dig through enough posts or other online content (even without pictures) and figure it out. It is simply a matter of time and work. For people such as Jerica here who have Youtube videos, blogs, personal websites, Facebook, Twitter, and Myspace you can and will be found by those who want to find you. It really is simple. A ->-bleeped-<- ->-bleeped-<- sits down at the computer and types in "TS" and "name of city, name of state." A bunch of Facebook and other sites come up. They start viewing the images. Even if none of them are familiar say there is one they like so they start reading. You may never put your address on anything but you mention the grocery store you went to on X and Y street. Well, people shop in their own neighborhoods. You mention a couple of restaurants or bars you go to or other routines also providing dots on a map. Now when they just happen to be driving by (or worse stalking) and see you they know who you are because they've seen you online.
This is just the reality of today's high tech world. Don't say or put anything online you would not say on national news. Moving to a new town, changing jobs, etc. doesn't work anymore and not even moving to another country. Once you put something online you have put it on TV and sometimes literally as even news crews surf interesting blogs and sites to generate stories.
I think you pass well according to your video. Your voice sounds excellent and you don't seem like anything other than a woman to me. I would still bet my money on the internet that may have caused this. A lot of TSs strive for stealth. I think it becomes a time and place thing. You can't run and hide everywhere because that would mean you could never put anything online, never be in any media spotlight, and even ten years after a transition you could run into an old friend who may still recognize you or hear about you from a friend of that friend. You pick your battles. There are people who need to know, people who don't, and people who it isn't important to either way. Some creep in a truck following you to the drug store isn't someone I would be concerned about being stealth or non-stealth to. The only thing I would be concerned about is getting the hell away from such a creep and maceing them if I need to.
Keep up the good work. I'm certainly no expert but you seem to be doing a lot right.