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Insights, guides, and updates about digital privacy.
Privacy
Browser Fingerprinting: What It Is and How to Defend Against It
Cookies are not the only way websites track you. Browser fingerprinting builds a unique profile from your device characteristics, and most people have no idea it is happening.
Privacy
The Real Price of Free Online Services
When a product is free, you are the product. Here is exactly what you trade for free accounts and how to minimise the cost.
Privacy
How Temporary Email Addresses Actually Protect Privacy (And Where They Fall Short)
A real email address is a tracking identifier, a breach liability, and a spam magnet rolled into one string. Temporary email addresses exist to absorb those risks so a real inbox doesn't have to.
Privacy
What Is a Disposable Email Address and Why It Matters More Than Most People Think
Disposable email addresses sit between your real inbox and the services demanding access to it. Here is what they actually do, how the different types compare, and where the gaps are.
Privacy
The State of Online Privacy in 2025: Breach Fatigue, Regulatory Gaps, and the Slow Shift Toward Data Minimisation
The breach statistics from 2025 follow a pattern that has repeated since the mid-2010s: bigger numbers, broader impact, and faster exploitation of stolen data. The response from most organisations hasn't changed either. The response from individuals is starting to.
Privacy
Inside the Data-Broker Industry: How Personal Information Becomes a Commodity and What Individuals Can Do About It
A database in Virginia contains a record with a name, home address, estimated income, and a list of recently visited websites. The person it describes never created it, never consented to it, and has no direct relationship with the company that assembled it.
Privacy
Your Email Address Is the Master Key to Your Digital Life. Stop Handing It Out.
The average email address appears in at least four publicly known data breaches. It's also the recovery credential for banking, the login for social media, and the tracking anchor that ties all of it together.
Privacy
Cookie Consent Banners Do Not Protect Your Privacy. Here Is What Does.
Clicking 'Reject All' on a cookie banner feels like taking control. It addresses maybe 30% of the tracking happening on that page. The other 70% doesn't need cookies at all.
Privacy
Anonymous Accounts Are Not a Feature. They Are an Architecture Decision.
Most platforms call their accounts 'private' because of a policy someone wrote. Code-based anonymous accounts are private because of how they are built. The distinction matters more than most people realise.
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