01. Use a Password Manager
Generate and store long, unique passwords for every account. Pair it with multi-factor authentication everywhere it is offered.
root@css:~$ ./privacy --harden
Practical, vendor-neutral habits anyone can adopt today to protect their identity, data, and devices.
Generate and store long, unique passwords for every account. Pair it with multi-factor authentication everywhere it is offered.
Prefer HTTPS, use a reputable VPN on untrusted networks, and consider Tor for sensitive anonymous browsing.
Email is the master key to most accounts. Enable MFA, watch for phishing, and consider a privacy-respecting provider.
Full-disk encryption (LUKS, FileVault, BitLocker) keeps your data safe if a device is lost or stolen.
Revoke unnecessary location, microphone, and contact access. Fewer permissions means a smaller attack surface.
Share less, use privacy-focused search and browsers, and review your data exposure with periodic self-audits.