this post was submitted on 20 Jul 2023
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DeGoogle Yourself

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;TLDR: Is privacy actions on an individual level worth pursuing, when friends and family are doing nothing to strengthen their privacy and when living in a country where my social security number, phone number, and so on, really can not be hidden?

Hi fellow DeGooglers. I have spent the last few years degoogling mine, and my GF:s lives and I am really happy about coming as far as I/we have come.

I am now starting to doubt alot of the things we have degoogled in our lives and I want to ask this community about it.

We live in a country, that has national records about everyone living in the nation. Almost every service the inhabitants of this country use, are relying on social security numbers, phone numbers, email and so on. We also almost daily rely on our banking apps to identify ourselves when using different services.

To this day I have persuaded a lot of our friends to use Signal but all of them use Signal as an extra app to communicate with just me or my GF.

My GF still has Instagram/Snapchat/Facebook, you name it and I am wondering how private I/we really am/are when the friends I/we are interacting with, are doing nothing to strengthen their privacy?

Is I wrote above, it is common for me to give my address, phone number, (throwaway)email when signing up for almost any service in the country I live in. Oftentimes one also has to identify with a form of a banking app, that almost all residents in this country has.

I am thinking that alot of the services I, have to, use know who I am, they have my phone number and they are almost certainly sharing it with third party companies (within GDPR). These companies also have the phone numbers of my friends who have my telephone number, and that way, the big data companies could easily link my phone number to who I am, based on that my friends and family have my number in their contacts list.

Is privacy worth pursuing on my part, or is it actually just redundant? Could I actually just use, lets say, Whatsapp/Messenger/Snapchat and it would not really matter?

Edit1: Services that I use: Proton, Mullvad, GrapheneOS, Simplelogin, Nextcloud, and all the usual FOSS apps everyone is using Services that my GF uses: The same as me, but also Instagram, Snapchat, Facebook, Messenger and a few more.

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[–] [email protected] 11 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I started my journey to degoogle myself very recently. I'm still to make the transition from Google stuff, but for now I treat it two fold.

  1. I treat it as a side hobby - I know it would be more convenient to just stay under the Google umbrella, but I'm interested in the state of FOSS and how far you can replicate gtools. I'm waiting for my Synology NAS drive and hopefully this will cover most of my needs.
  2. A personal statement/protest against greedy companies - I know that cutting access to some of my data (I'm not disillusioned - I know they still have a lot of my data and they will still have access to some) won't make a difference, but by switching from WhatsApp to Signal, I created a conversation among my friends and family. They became a bit more aware of the current situation. Same with switching from Reddit to Lemmy. The further I travel on my path, the more people around me are interested in their own privacy.

So if you are realistic about it, as you are judging from your post, I would say it's worth - even if just as a middle finger to the big, privacy violating conglomerates. We shouldn't just roll over and give up our personal lives.

Also, you will have full deniability of any future repercussions of people allowing big corpos doing with their data whatever they want.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

This is absolutely correct. The process to fully make this sort of transition is arduous and must be fought in small battles. When I decided I wanted to pursue this protest, I bought a NAS, and completely separate phone from my daily driver to prepare my alternatives. Over time, the convenience of using self-hosted/FOSS vs Google became imperceptible, and soon I was ready to make the full leap to my new phone. That was an incredible moment. I believe that if we share our experiences and knowledge along this journey, we'll instill confidence into others and inspire them to join us

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

+1 about the protest aspect.