Overwhelmed by Digital Privacy? Reset with These Practical Tips
Keep your kidsโ info offline, fake your security question answers, use a password manager, and more
By: Maria Puertas
If thinking about protecting your privacy online makes you feel anxious, overwhelmed, or resigned, you arenโt alone.
Nearly 70 percent of Americans felt overwhelmed solely by the number of passwords they have to track, according to a 2023ย Pew Research Center survey. Just over 60 percent arenโt sure that any steps they take when managing their privacy online make a difference, the same survey found.
Thatโs why, this January, The Markup published one practical privacy tip a day that Markup staffers or readers actually use in their own lives.
We called it โGentle Januaryโ because the tips are a mix of calming (did you know you can stop tracking all those passwordsย yourself?), whimsical (yes yes, we do teach you to fakeย someย things), or downright practical (turns out, you shouldย installย those software updates).
Hereโs a condensed version of all 20 tips in one place. Click on any individual tip to learn more.
- ๐ถ๏ธย Use a privacy protectorย on your phone and computer screens to protect your activity from wandering eyes.
- ๐ย Download a privacy-protecting web browserย that blocks not only ads, but cookies, trackers, and more.
- โ๏ธย Install software updatesย as soon as theyโre available to stay secure and avoid being hacked.
- ๐ย Activate two-factor authenticationย across all of your accounts, ideally using authenticator apps or security keys.
- ๐ฒย Donโt share your current locationย on social mediaโat least, until after youโve left it.
- ๐ย Use a password managerย to ensure you have a secure, unique password for each of your accounts.
- ๐ย Upgrade your wireless routerย hardware, especially if yours is from before 2020. Your connection will be more secure thanks to new privacy standards.
- โ๏ธย Get a burner phone numberย in case you need an extra level of privacy when working, signing up for shopper rewards programs, or even using dating apps.
- ๐ถย Review your social media privacy settingsย to stop your account from being shown to people you may not want seeing it.
- ๐บ๏ธย Ditch Google Mapsย for an alternative. Even switching to Apple Maps can reduce how much of your data is sent to advertisers.
- ๐ต๏ธย Browse the web in โprivateโ or โincognitoโ modeย to reduce the amount of cookies youโre tracked by and keep your accounts secure. Especially if youโre using a public computer.
- โย Activate a little-known Screen Time setting, if youโre an iPhone user, to decrease the chance of your data being taken if your phone gets lost or stolen.
- ๐ธย Keep your kids’ info off the internetย if youโre a parent. Thatโs it. Thatโs the tip.
- ๐ย Keep your info off the internetย by using services like DeleteMe, that remove your data from data brokersโ hands.
- ๐ธย Donโt forget about real-world privacy, like using cash and shredding your mail before you throw it away.
- ๐ปย Try using a โvirtual machineโย the next time you want to open a potentially sketchy document or software.
- ๐ขย Implement a written or numeric passcode, rather than using FaceID or other face recognition technology, to unlock your phone.
- ๐ย Lie about your birthday!ย To retailers in particular. They donโt need to know.
- ๐ย Fake your answers to account security questionsย to keep hackers from finding and using your real info. This can also stop some pretty personal data from getting exposed in a potential breach.
- โ๏ธย Say goodbye to Gmail, Hotmail, and the likeย by switching to a more private email provider.ย ย
Actions like theseโhowever small they may feelโdo make a difference. Just think about how one organizationย turning off its tracking codeย can potentially protect the data of all of its visitors. By implementing just a few of these privacy tips, your accounts could be safer and less of your data could end up with advertisers.
While Gentle January has come to an end for now, our newsroom regularly investigates how technologyโfromย Facebookโs Pixelย to software implemented byย colleges and universitiesโmay be putting sensitive data about you at risk. These investigations often come paired withย information you can useย to better protect your privacy bothย onlineย andย in the real world. To get notified each time we publish a new story about the ways technology is shaping our society, sign up for ourย Klaxon newsletter.
This article was originally published on The Markup and was republished under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license.
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