I recently signed up for a service and was greeted with the usual requests for access to my location, contacts, camera and microphone. Later, I went back to see what I’d actually agreed to and spent more time digging through privacy settings than using the service itself.
That experience felt representative of the problem with privacy today. Most people just want some control over their personal information, instead of sending it to data brokers across the internet.
But maintaining that control usually takes money or a good deal of effort. Sometimes both. It’s a frustrating reality for people who are increasingly forced online, but there are also small steps you can take to start bolstering your digital privacy.
Privacy often takes an unavoidable back seat to convenience
The internet runs on a simple arrangement. You get convenience, companies get data. Google Maps tells you the fastest way to get somewhere. Netflix lets you watch countless shows and movies whenever and wherever you want. Social media allows us to stay in contact with people we may rarely see or in some cases have never met.
The tradeoff? Navigation apps know where you’re going, streaming services know what you watch, social media platforms know what holds your attention, loyalty programs know what you buy and so on. In return, these services become faster, smarter and easier to use.
The catch is that opting out isn’t always practical — or possible. Schools use apps, employers use online platforms and banks and government agencies increasingly expect you to manage things through digital accounts. Participating in modern life often means sharing at least some information. And the default setting is usually more data collection, not less.
If you want greater control, you usually have to go looking for it.
People who want more privacy are often told to disable trackers, adjust permissions, use separate email addresses and seek out privacy-focused alternatives. None of this is particularly difficult, but it does require time and a certain amount of know-how. And when you multiply it across all the different accounts and devices you have, maintaining a semblance of privacy quickly feels unmanageable.
Your data is valuable, so privacy becomes expensive
One reason privacy has become harder to protect is that personal data has become extremely valuable. Companies may not care about any single details of your life, but they can learn a great deal when enough details are collected together.
A search query, a location ping, a few online purchases, app activity and browsing history may seem insignificant on their own. Combined, they can reveal habits, preferences and routines with surprising accuracy.
Take something as simple as searching for a restaurant in a navigation app. You’re looking for a place to eat, but that search may also reveal what kind of food you like, how far you’re willing to travel, when you typically go out, how much you’re willing to spend and how often you do it. Add enough of those interactions together and a detailed profile begins to take shape.
That detailed profile is valuable to companies who want to sell their products. The more precise a picture they have of their audience, the more accurately they can target their advertising. Many online services charge no money because they’re able to fund themselves through advertising and data collection, which they can sell to brokers and marketers. If you want to shield your data from all the data-hungry companies out there, the most efficient solutions are going to cost you money.
That might be OK for some services, but less so for ones that are meant to guard your privacy. Most legitimate VPNs, password managers, identity monitoring services and privacy-focused email providers all come with recurring costs that many people may not be willing or able to pay for.
This is especially common with services such as private email providers. Rather than generating revenue from ads, they charge users directly.
That’s fine if you can afford it, but not everyone can. And even for the people who can pay for four different privacy-enhancing services each month, it’s more subscriptions, logins and tools to juggle. It’s a bad arrangement for people who just want to conduct their digital lives without everyone knowing almost every detail of what they do.
Better privacy starts with small changes
The goal of privacy depends on your definition, but it doesn’t have to be complete anonymity. Most people don’t need to disappear from the internet or avoid technology altogether. Small changes can help reduce the amount of personal information that’s collected, shared or exposed.
Using a password manager, enabling multifactor authentication (MFA), reviewing app permissions and limiting unnecessary data sharing are all practical steps that can improve privacy and security. Privacy-focused browsers can also help reduce tracking during everyday web browsing.
My advice: Think about privacy as risk reduction rather than perfection. You don’t have to eliminate every possible source of data collection. You just need to make informed decisions about what information you share and with whom.
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