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by wfo 3129 days ago
It will never be reasonable, feasible, or worth discussing that e.g. every day users run a linux only locked down desktop and never use their mobile phones. Every time a privacy topic comes up, there is always someone to come in and say "uninstall windows and OSX, delete all of your social media accounts and block the entire Internet, quit your job that requires you to use these devices and services, run your own mail server, if you REALLY care about privacy you'll essentially stop using the Internet, cut yourself off from all of society and make your devices unusable" -- which can offer advice for people looking to do this but adds little to the discussion around tracking, privacy, data security.

If you try to fight against advertisers and privacy-invading trackers and malware alone you will always lose. They are huge companies. They bribe your computer manufacturers to auto-install malware. They infect your operating systems. They have CAs. They have millions to spend on thousands of brilliant engineers who will work around anything you come up with to attack your security and privacy. An answer must be feasible for almost everybody so that we can all enact it collectively, technical or not, or it is no answer at all.

1 comments

Very true. I mean, I have an iPhone for work. And a dumb cellphone for personal stuff. I do use social media with family and close friends, but that's from notebook and desktop. I don't mix social and work on the same devices, and I'd be out of work if I did.

However, I strive on such insecure channels to be very uninteresting. I restrict everything that's potentially controversial to channels that are more private and anonymous, using VPNs and Tor. I share about that stuff with nobody who knows who I am in meatspace. And vice versa.

So it's not that I'm "cut[ting] [my]self off from all of society". But I am revealing different aspects of myself to society through channels that would take considerable effort to link. That is, I compartmentalize.

I realize that I've gone to extremes. But for me, it's mainly become a hobby. Or rather, LARP. Still, anyone can start compartmentalizing. Just get a used low-end gaming machine, install Linux and VirtualBox, and learn to use VMs. Run a VPN client in the host, and learn enough iptables to lock it down. Run Linux VMs with other VPN clients, to get nested VPN chains. Run Whonix VMs to connect via Tor.