8 comments

  • bbbhltz 10 hours ago ago

    I used to be a try-hard. I'm not infosec or a programmer, I'm just a person with a computer. I would install every extension possible that claimed to do something, I encrypted everything, basically following every how-to article willy-nilly and fell down a rabbit-hole[1].

    Now I keep things simpler:

    - social media has been whiddled down to Fediverse and LinkedIn, phone is degoogled

    - I do send many of my important emails encrypted - My browser has minimal extensions installed --- because I learned about fingerprinting

    - No cloud, no AI

    - Never use public WiFi at McDonald's or hotels

    - I've used Linux for the past 18 or 19 years as my daily, but that isn't a magic shield.

    In short: didn't get into hardening; some encryption, no cloud; mostly avoiding social media (LinkedIn will soon be deleted).

    [1]: https://bbbhltz.codeberg.page/blog/2021/04/the-privacy-secur...

    • authorfly 8 hours ago ago

      Out of interest, during your try-hard phase, did you use VPNs?

      The try-hard meta seemed to be the opposite of midwit meme e.g.

      Newbie: Use the VPN it prevents tracking and password leaks on wifi! Mid level: Don't use the VPN as the VPN owner could be tracking everything! Elite level: Use multiple VPNs for different things, self host Tor and VPNs in other countries

  • jqpabc123 9 hours ago ago

    Brave offers the most privacy friendly browsing available by default on both desktop and mobile.

    This easily negates much of the privacy invasion efforts of ad networks. Even if they do continue to track you, this hinders their ability to put "personalized" ads in front of you.

    If enough people do this, invasive "personalized" ads and associated machinery will eventually reach a tipping point and become non-profitable.

    This won't stop advertising but it will force the industry to adopt more sensible, privacy respecting "context sensitive" techniques.

    Social media apps are a different story.

  • skeptrune 7 hours ago ago

    > Browser

    Brave. I keep extensions limited to reduce potential uniqueness. Unfortunately, I do use Linux. Would be nice to modify the fingerprint to be less bespoke, but I haven't taken the time to figure that out.

    >Social media

    I only use it through web browsers. Apps may be fine, but much harder to trust. GrapheneOS does make me feel better about it, but all the web apps now are great in mobile so it seems fine.

    Extreme Privacy by Michael Bazzell[1] is an excellent read on this topic. It provides insight into mostly practical tips and can always be watered down to meet your requirements.

    [1]: https://inteltechniques.com/book7.html

  • oguz-ismail 11 hours ago ago

    I have nothing to hide so I don't care

    • andrei_says_ 9 hours ago ago

      Thank you for the opportunity to mention these:

      “If you give me six lines written by the hand of the most honest of men, I will find something in them which will hang him.”

      Cardinal Richelieu

      ——

      https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nothing_to_hide_argument

      • buginprod 7 hours ago ago

        Exactly. It is not philosophical either. Lots of wrongful convictions. Even if proved wrong you may not even get out of prison!

    • buginprod 7 hours ago ago

      You think you don't. Whats your HN password? Exactly.