The Beginner's Guide to the Privacy. Part 1
- For a long time I wanted to write my own online privacy guide, but every time I tried the text seemed too complicated and too boring. Today many people don't even know how to switch their search engine. Big search engines like Google know this and ready to pay to be the default search engine in your browser. We need to change it!
The Beginner's Guide to the Privacy.
Part 1: Browsers, search engines and hidden ad trackers
Step 1: Browser
For most users the browser is the main «window» to the Internet, and this means the choice of the browser is very important for your online privacy. Chrome is a bad choice and all Chromium-based browsers from China too.
If you have no preference, begin with Firefox. This is the last non-Chromium browser, and we must support it. If you want control and millions settings, your choice is Vivaldi. If you still need Chrome, try Brave: it looks and works like Chrome, but has much better privacy policy.
Maybe you'll like new Opera, but because of some nuances today I just cannot recommend it «for everyone», especially for beginners who are worried about their privacy.
Step 2: Search engine
I bet your default search engine is Google. Almost everyone uses Google, and this is really bad for privacy. The only exception is «regional» search engines: for example, in Russia and CIS local Yandex and MailRu Group (both have their own search engine and ad networks) compete with Google on almost equal terms. But a local monopoly is no better than a global one!
If you want to leave your filter bubble and avoid surveillance, try these search engines:
- DuckDuckGo – doesn't track or store your search queries, doesn't filter search results.
- StartPage – uses own proxy to hide your real IP from websites.
- Ecosia – donates part of ad revenue to plant trees.
- Qwant – the main European search engine.
Step 3: Hidden ad trackers
- DuckDuckGo Privacy Essentials – blocks ad trackers, switches your connection to HTTPS (when it's possible) and shows privacy rating of the website.
- Privacy Badger – blocks ad trackers, and if the extension found the same script on several website, it will be blocked.
- Disconnect – blocks ad trackers (who could have predicted this?) and available also as a mobile app.
- Ghostery – blocks ads and hidden trackers, switches connection to HTTPS and edits your data if a website doesn't work without a tracker
Step 4: Ad blockers
- Ghostery – because you already know it. If Ghostery works fine, why do you need anything else?
- AdGuard – the only ad blocker with own rules and lists. Nice UI, simple settings. Best choice for beginners.
- AdBlock and AdBlock Plus – the first ab blocker for Chrome and Firefox. Despite the similar names, they are not related, these are different extensions.
- uBlock Origin – all-in-one tool you need. It may be too hard for beginners, so I recommend it only if you used something else and need more.
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