Delete Your Internet Footprint
Reader's Digest US|November 2021
With spies lurking everywhere, how can you keep yourself safe? Here are 25 smart steps, from the editor of HowtoGeek.com.
By Chris Hoffman
Delete Your Internet Footprint

As the saying goes: The Internet is forever. Once you’ve put something online—a credit card number, a silly photo, a heat-of the-moment comment on social media—it can come back to haunt you.

But what are the risks, really? “There are two worst-case scenarios,” says Thorin Klosowski, privacy and security editor at Wirecutter, a product recommendation service owned by the New York Times. “The most obvious one is a security issue. Everyone’s e-mail address and basic details are leaked somewhere online, and if you reuse passwords, that means a nefarious person will have an easier time getting into your accounts.”

The problem is getting worse: Identity theft cases more than doubled in 2020, according to the Federal Trade Commission, with reported monetary losses from fraud overall climbing to $3.3 billion from $1.8 billion in 2019.

“The second worst-case scenario is more primal: embarrassment,” says Klosowski. And sometimes the pricks to our pride are far more personal than blushing over an unflattering photo. “Many of us store our most intimate thoughts in a digital notes app, draft e-mails we never send or pour out our private feelings into a direct message to a friend. This is the type of thing that can get leaked online, either through a provider being negligent or through your own misunderstanding of the often-confusing privacy settings in the software and services.”

With these sorts of slip-ups, the stakes can be high. But you’re not powerless. You can stand up for your privacy and begin to take control, starting right now. Here’s how:

1 Mix Up Your Passwords

This story is from the November 2021 edition of Reader's Digest US.

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