For me its probably deleting all my social medias, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram etc
My migration to Firefox and starting to use uBlock, definitely the best decisions I’ve made.
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This is an excellent one and one I’ve been dreading getting to. I have a system that works great among several credit cards all setup to optimize cash back and track certain spending my having specific purposes for the various cards. These are all mainstream providers, although I haven’t looked I can assume the privacy policies are not great.
I’d love a service that could offer both an internally good privacy policy as well as allowing for many virtual cards that don’t require a real name to validate. I could envision a service that works like this…
- Still a credit card.
- Unlimited or near unlimited virtual cards, no real name required with merchant to validate.
- Similar protections as other credit cards regarding fraud etc, generally accepted as much safer than using debit.
- Binning to allow categories for the various virtual cards (only really helpful for tracking purposes, guess this could always be done by hand).
- Decrease cash back amount - say 0.5 % with the difference between the more typical 1-3% based on category being extra profit to offset what is lost by not sharing any customer data with other parties.
I realize Privacy.com probably comes close on some of these but works more like a debit card from what I understand. Of course cash is the best but I’m not sure that convenience tradeoff is one I’m ready to make yet, but more power to you. That is a LOT of personal data not bouncing around various parties.
Phasing out my Google usage.
I didn’t really use Facebook, Twitter other “big tech” shite, so those would have been on the list to phase out too.
I used to use Google for everything (documents, notes, email, photos, videos, passwords, browser, phone) but the only remaining hard dependency I have on Google is YouTube.
I do everything I can to avoid giving Google useful data here but it’s sadly still a lot and I’m still at the whims of the tech giant on whether that remains a possibility. The only reason youtube-dl, Piped, Newpipe, SmartTubeNext etc. still exist is that Google hasn’t thrown significant money towards blocking them yet.If I want to see something interesting, Nebula has me like 40% covered nowadays, so that has been pretty decent but I don’t see YouTube going away as the prime entertainment and learning platform any time soon as there aren’t any real competitors in the indie video publishing business. :/
Yes, for me this has probably been the biggest and also the easiest one. So much data, in my case, willingly given to one of the worst companies from a privacy stand point. Every photo, email, etc, etc. Email was a very easy transition over a few months, I’m shocked but how quickly I’ve got the point of only logging into gmail once every 6 months or so just to check if anything still going there. I realized I didn’t really need all of my photos going to their servers, now running no backup for photos although my plan is to start using iTunes for periodic encrypted local backups to my PC, mainly for photos and contacts.
Selfhosting, including pihole.
Replacing Google services with selfhosted or privacy preserving cloud solutions. The biggest one of those was probably switching to Firefox with selfhosted sync server.
An interesting one! A few questions, if you don’t mind:
- Is it worth it (compared to not syncing)?
- Is the account server self-hosted as well?
Sure no problem
- Definitely. I have a bunch of devices with FF installed, so syncing them makes things much easier, and because it’s selfhosted my data stays with me. Although just using Mozilla servers is pretty safe as well, because sync is e2e encrypted. That’s not the case for Google sync, so switching from Chrome is the important part.
- You can do that, but afaik it’s quite a bit more involved and not really worth it for me. I have a Mozilla account anyway, and the account server doesn’t store any more personal data if you use it for syncing. But if you don’t want a Mozilla account then it might be a good option.
Ad-blocking DNS. Blocks the nuisance and saves bandwidth. Couldn’t live without it now.
I think that would have to be a toss-up between deleting all proprietary corporate social media, such as Twitter and Spybook, or finally kicking Google to the curb, and using Lineage OS.
I installed Linux on our family PC when I was in high school since it was sluggish running Windows. That’s what got me into the world of tech in general. I got interested in FOSS, and privacy awareness was of course part of the ethos.
Using grapheneos, it was a good gateway to other privacy & security enhancing habits
For me, it was ditching Windows.
I used WhatsApp more than any app om my phone this time last year. I still use Discord but at least I’m beginning to move towards Signal and Matrix.
uBlock Origin and Privacy Badger.
Can’t fingerprint my machine if your fingerprinting script never loads.
They could fingerprint you by IP address, header files that don’t require JavaScript, your network traffic fingerprint, traffic flows, cookies, being logged into different sites at the same time content cached locally.
I’m not saying this to argue with you, I’m just trying to caution you against thinking you’re untrackable with just with ublockorigin and privacy badger.
Running my home servers
2 things:
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A nickname: on every online account I set a nickname and not my real name. If you google name you get 2 results from same site about some competition. If you google my nickname you get 2 pages of my stuff.
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Switch from Google (to GrapheneOS, ProtpnMail, etc.)
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Getting a functional nextcloud server. I self-hosted mine, but there’s lots of VPS options that are pretty easy to set up.
It’s basically a drop in replacement for the majority of proprietary productivity suites (i.e. Google drive, onedrive and icloud). One service covers a lot of bases.