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infosec in 2025 - Printable Version +- we live in hell (https://weliveinhell.net) +-- Forum: hazardous material (https://weliveinhell.net/forumdisplay.php?fid=8) +--- Forum: political containment zone (https://weliveinhell.net/forumdisplay.php?fid=9) +--- Thread: infosec in 2025 (/showthread.php?tid=118) |
infosec in 2025 - gorzek - 02-04-2025 I'm gonna do my part to help people secure their data in 2025. If your first thought is, "What's the point?" don't think that! Being conscientious about your data privacy is always worthwhile, even if it seems like a losing battle sometimes. So here's the stuff I recommend, and remember, you don't have to do all of these, but any you can do or are willing to do, do them!
I am sure I am forgetting some things. Please offer your own suggestions, too! RE: infosec in 2025 - FrodoSwaggins - 02-04-2025 These are all great suggestions. I have a lot of thoughts about the Linux issue, but everything you've said is correct: Microsoft is not your friend and Windows is spyware at this point. Am I switching to Linux tomorrow? No, but it gives me food for thought on how much computing I actually need to do and on how many devices. One thing that I would emphasize is that its essential to understand your own information footprint. What's available about you online? Chances are, the answer is "everything," but if you are aware of specific information you can work to get it taken down. How to find your information footprint (and a few things you can do about it):
Rather than try to provide an exhaustive list of resources and invariably get things wrong, I'll just advise that the Electronic Frontier Foundation makes a living, nay, a pursuit of helping people protect their privacy. Their website Cover Your Tracks has a ton of interactive tools to help you understand how insecure your browsing is and how you can secure it better: https://coveryourtracks.eff.org/ If you want to look at a resource that very nearly is exhaustive, consider the Awesome Privacy List on Github for privacy focused tools: https://github.com/Lissy93/awesome-privacy/ And comparably, the Awesome OSInt List for 1,001 ways to find info about yourself online: https://github.com/jivoi/awesome-osint?tab=readme-ov-file There are many resources online for victims of doxxing, which also may be of use to you. Here is one such page from City University of New YorK: https://www.cuny.edu/about/administration/offices/transformation/diversity-equity-and-inclusion-hub/doxing/#1702342291787-f9bc7e57-2bcc And as a bonus, Opt Out Guides from Delete me: https://joindeleteme.com/blog/opt-out-guides/ RE: infosec in 2025 - antipelican - 02-09-2025 I am curious about browser fingerprinting. There are lots of websites that will give you reports on how easily identifiable your browser is, but beyond the basic changing certain setting in Firefox, I'm coming up short on how to make sure that my fingerprint is less identifiable . Running the tests on coveryourtracks.eff.org and browserleaks.com just gives me info about what might be identifiable, but not how to fix it. For reference, I use a paid VPN and generally use Firefox with setting changed to (theoretically) make me less identifiable. I will sometimes use Tor. I never access the web without at least the VPN, change what servers I connect to frequently, and have a killswitch so that hopefully an error doesn't cause my location to leak, but it's hard to understand how difficult this actually makes me to track considering fingerprinting seems to pull data not connected to VPN status but rather my hardware settings. RE: infosec in 2025 - gorzek - 02-09-2025 (02-09-2025, 10:18 PM)antipelican Wrote: I am curious about browser fingerprinting. There are lots of websites that will give you reports on how easily identifiable your browser is, but beyond the basic changing certain setting in Firefox, I'm coming up short on how to make sure that my fingerprint is less identifiable . Running the tests on coveryourtracks.eff.org and browserleaks.com just gives me info about what might be identifiable, but not how to fix it.What you're doing sounds pretty reasonable already. One thing you might try is this addon: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/multi-account-containers/ You can just spin up a new "account" constantly and it'll have fresh data and fingerprinting will be far less effective. Be sure you've turned on Resist Fingerprinting: https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/resist-fingerprinting This randomizes a number of settings that are used for fingerprints. RE: infosec in 2025 - FrodoSwaggins - 02-10-2025 Firefox as a company / org has had major issues of late and may not be around much longer. Opera is really suffering for marketshare. So what IS the most secure browser? What's the best browser for privacy? Is that the same thing? Every criticism you lob at Chrome is almost certainly true, but it may also have the best security updates of any browser due to its massive funding. Also, VPNs. What's the best paid VPN? I would assume it would be a VPN legally and physically based in an EU country with strong privacy laws and consumer protections. Thoughts? RE: infosec in 2025 - gorzek - 02-11-2025 Firefox is still the best one that isn't owned by a company bent on harvesting your data and selling it to advertisers. OK, Opera would also be good! |