World Down Syndrome Day and Digital Accessibility: Inclusive Privacy
I've been thinking about who gets left out when we design privacy tools and consent systems. On World Down Syndrome Day, that question feels more pressing than usual.
Found 10 results for "bitwarden"
I've been thinking about who gets left out when we design privacy tools and consent systems. On World Down Syndrome Day, that question feels more pressing than usual.
You don't need to spend money to take back your privacy. Every tool on this list is free, open source, and works in India. Most of them take less than ten minutes to set up.
Eighty-three percent of Indians reuse the same password across multiple accounts. Here are real-world methods for building strong, memorable passwords without losing your mind.
A colleague lost Rs 4.7 lakh to a single phishing email that looked exactly like an SBI alert. Here's how to spot the fakes, lock down your inbox, and make sure you're not the next easy target.
Your DigiLocker holds driving licences, Aadhaar, marksheets, and insurance papers all in one place. If someone breaks in, they don't just steal files -- they steal your identity. Here's how to lock it down before that happens.
Over 1.8 billion records belonging to Indian citizens were exposed between 2018 and 2025. Here's a year-by-year breakdown of the biggest data breaches, what went wrong each time, and what ordinary people can actually do about it.
Most password advice floating around Indian tech circles is recycled nonsense. Here's what actually works when you've got 80+ accounts, UPI apps, and Aadhaar-linked services to protect -- tested and priced for India.
Ever wonder why your uncle's WhatsApp profile photo ended up on a scam account asking his friends for money? Half a billion Indians use this app daily, and I'd bet most haven't touched a single privacy setting.
Everyone tells you to check if your data's been leaked. I ignored that advice for three years -- until a loan showed up on my CIBIL report that I never applied for, traced back to a telecom breach I could've caught in five minutes.
So I was chatting with a friend about why his Aadhaar got misused, and it hit me -- most of us in India still don't get why our data matters until something goes wrong.