Beginner's Guide
Hey ya'all I've been working on blocking big tech from tracking me and manipulating the information I view. So here we will post tips that we find to help keep users safe! A general rule of thumb is never use software provided by these big giants, use FOSS. FOSS stands for free open source software. It's much safer because these proprietary apps/software from big tech don't allow you to see how they operate whereas open source software allows you to dig into it and see if there is any malicious code in it.
Keep in mind, though, that many companies claim to be "private" for good PR but don't actually practice such things, remember to always read their privacy policy.
Some things I've done is switched from Google to an alternative search engine. They don't track your searches like Google does(but read their privacy policy to be sure). Some search engines use their own crawler but also rely on other search engine results, but those other engines won't see your queries. The only alternative search engine that isn't a meta search engine(IE not relying on other search engines for results) is
Mojeek. Go
here for an in depth analysis of all major alternative search engine's privacy policies.
Browsers
I've also moved away from Chrome and installed Brave and Librewolf on my laptop.
Here is a good guide comparing major browsers Brave and Bromite on Android. These are very good for blocking many trackers. As you may know, accepting cookies allows websites to see what other sites you use. The best browser to use is multiple, called browser isolation! All browsers have what they call browser fingerprints which identify you. If, for instance, you need to access a Google services like Gmail for example, ONLY do so on one browser. Do anything else on other browsers. This way Google will know who you are and what you are doing but to them they only think you are accessing Google services, they won't know your other business. I like to online shop on one browser, access financial info on another, search things on a third, and visit personal sites on yet another.
Recommended extensions/u]
uBlock Origin - uBlock Origin is not just an “ad blocker“, it's a wide-spectrum content blocker with CPU and memory efficiency as a primary feature. Out of the box, uBO blocks ads, trackers, coin miners, popups, etc.
Note: With uBlock you can do all that you need for privacy with just the one extension. Keeping extensions to a minimum is best as they can be counter intuitive and help identify you easier due to being detected and having to trust the author of the extension.
[u]DNS
Be sure you are using a privacy focused DNS if you do not have a VPN(more below)! DNS stands for Domain Name System. Think of it as of "address book" of the Internet: your browsers and apps use it to translate domain names that make no sense to them into IP addresses that they can understand. Google DNS and many others are logging your information.
I would recommend
Adguard DNS due to it auto blocking ads and using DNScrypt. There are other privacy oriented DNS services though.
Social Media
One thing you'll defintely want to do for privacy is delete all social media apps like Facebook and Instagram along with their accounts. With Instagram, they can now access your microphone and camera at will. There are private apps you can use for Youtube as well such as
Newpipe for android and
FreeTube for PC which does not have any proprietary Google apis.
Mobile
If you have an Android, do NOT use the default keyboard!! The gboard if it's stock(Samsung has their own keyboard) is not private and these companies can see EVERYTHING you type via these preinstalled apps. Good alternatives for Android are AnysoftKeyboard and Open Board. For iOS there is Fractions keyboard or Typewise offline keyboard(unfortunately these are paid apps) These have no access to the internet and do not log your information.
A more serious person who is willing to go extra lengths should ditch Android and iOS completely. There are Linux phones such as
Pinephone that don't have tracking. Another option which is nearly as good is
GrapheneOS which removes all Google tracking and is based on Android open source project.
Windows
Windows has lots of data collection and telemetry. Microsoft can collect any personal data including: identity, passwords, demographics, interests/habits, usage data, contacts/relationships, location data, content such as emails, IMs, caller list, audio/video recordings. Cortana even records your keystrokes and financial information such as credit/debit cards!! It is recommended to go into the privacy settings in the control panel and disable everything there. That takes care of a lot of stuff but unless you have lots of knowledge, it is not easy to disable other things in Windows. That's where programs come in. A good program for W10 is
W10Privacy . Ultimately it is recommended to switch to open source OS like Linux. If you absolutely need Windows, it should be used for the one or two things you need it for, and all personal stuff on another device not running Windows.
Network
Be sure to change your router login credentials from your default which is ususally just admin/password! Most people leave this default and makes their home network very susceptible to invaders. You log into your router's firmware through a browser. Any browser will do. At the address field, type the IP address of your router. Most routers use an address of 192.168.1.1. But that's not always the case, so first you want to confirm the address of your router.
VPN(Virtual Private Network)
Not all VPNs are created equally. When considering a VPN, you ideally will want to choose one that is outside the Fourteen Eyes countries(although being in one of these countries does not mean the company is automatically bad) and definitely one that DOES NOT log any information. Some VPNs based in the United States were required to hand over logs to the federal government and also required to NOT notify their users about all of their data being collected. This is why ideally you want a VPN that is based outside of the jurisdiction and creates no logs! If they have no logs on you, they have nothing to hand over. It is also important that the VPN has been audited by a third party! Many VPNs can claim to keep no logs but actually do. Do not choose one that has misleading marketing such as being an end all be all solution to privacy.
Here is a list of VPNs that keep no logs!
Exif
When you take photos on a mobile device or a digital camera the photos have what is known as exif data that has tons of information and can even give your exact latitude and longitude details including what device you used to take it on. It makes it all really easy to link photos to an identity and where the person lives. What you need to do when sharing photos via text or social media is to delete the exif data. There are many programs that can do this but I recommend this one for desktop.
https://exifcleaner.com/
Terms of Service
If you've been too busy to read a company's privacy policy or terms of service, there is a website that does it for you and gives them grades based on how private they are with your data. They also put it in an easy to read fashion.
https://tosdr.org/
Links
https://privacyfocusedanalytics.info/
https://privacyguides.org/
https://privacytools.io/providers/dns/
https://restoreprivacy.com/
https://digdeeper.neocities.org/index.html
https://whotracks.me/
Here's are some youtube channels about internet privacy for more ideas!
Rob Braxman Tech
The Hated One
Techlore