7 ways to improve your privacy in 2022
Maintaining your online and offline privacy can seem like a Herculean, or even Sisyphean, task. Each day seems to bring with it new privacy scandals. But here's the thing: There are small and relatively painless steps you can take, right now, to protect your privacy. As you brace for, then settle into, 2022, take a few moments to spruce up your life with these privacy-focused New Year's resolutions.
1. Encrypt your computer
Your computer is the keeper of your secrets. Tax documents, bank accounts, and medical records are just a few of the personal files people keep on their laptops and desktops. And, if those computers are ever lost or stolen, those files can easily end up in the wrong hands. Thankfully, there's an easy way to protect yourself: encrypting your computer. "It's a really fantastic bit of basic security hygiene, like washing your hands or wearing a mask, that anyone can do that really gets you a lot of benefits," explained Cooper Quintin, a security researcher with the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
2. Adjust your smart TV settings
Watching TV is typically thought of as a passive activity, but that conception fails to take into account all the questionable goings on happening behind the screen. With smart TVs now the default being sold, viewing is no longer a one-way activity. "Beyond the risk that your TV manufacturer and app developers may be listening and watching you, that television can also be a gateway for hackers to come into your home," warned the FBI. "In a worst-case scenario, they can turn on your bedroom TV's camera and microphone and silently cyberstalk you." You can mitigate at least some of the risks posed by smart TVs, however, and all it takes is tweaking some settings.
3. Blur your house on Google Street View and Bing Maps
Google Street View is both incredibly useful, and incredibly invasive. The tool, which grants anyone with internet access a street-level view of houses and apartments around the world, seems custom built for online stalkers. It is also, however, relatively easy to partially opt out by requesting that Google — or Microsoft with its corresponding Bing Maps — blur its image of your home. Anyone hoping to get a digital peep through your windows will be left sorely out of luck.
4. Check your smartphone for stalkerware
Your phone is your phone, except when it's not. Stalkerware is a broad term for a family of apps, secretly installed on victims' smartphones, that report all kinds of private data back to abusers. "Stalkerware can track your location, record your phone calls and text messages, steal the passwords to the social media accounts you log into through your phone, reveal your contacts, your photos, your emails, and even your end-to-end encrypted communications," explained the Electronic Frontier Foundation's director of cybersecurity, Eva Galperin. It's a good habit to regularly check for it.
5. Tell your cell provider to stop sharing your data
Cell providers know a lot about you, and in exploitative hands that knowledge translates to cold, hard cash. T-Mobile, AT&T, and Verizon all share some form of customer data with third parties — often for advertising. While the specifics vary based on the carrier, the overall theme remains the same: What should be private information isn't so private. Take the time to tell your provider to stop sharing your data with third parties. You pay them, after all, and it's literally the least they can do to protect your privacy.
6. Check your computer for keyloggers
Using a computer can feel like a solitary act, but a type of hidden software, dubbed a keylogger, running in the background on your personal or work computer puts those solitary actions on display. Keyloggers, as the name suggests, record and save every keystroke a person makes. In other words, every email you write, password you enter, or web search you make is stored and later presented to whomever installed the keylogger.
7. Consider decentralized social media alternatives
Twitter has been a bit of a mess since billionaire Tesla CEO Elon Musk took the helm, amid an exodus of senior executives responsible for data privacy, cybersecurity and complying with regulations. While it’s not clear if the drama is causing many users to leave, lesser-known sites are emerging as new (or renewed) alternatives:
- Mastodon: A decentralized social network that is not owned by a single company or billionaire. It is made up of a network of servers, each run independently. There are no ads as Mastodon is funded by donations and grants.
- Counter Social: Runs an ad-free, chronological social platform that’s funded by users. To prevent foreign influence operations, Counter Social says it blocks access to several countries and boasts of offering one-click translation into over 80 languages.
- Clubhouse: The buzzy audio-only app that lets people talk to each other about topics of interest. Clubhouse lets you start or listen into conversations on a host of topics, from tech to pro sports.