Open Source Privacy Tools Every Indian Should Use
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.
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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.
Tor isn't just for hackers or whistleblowers. It's a legitimate privacy tool, it's legal in India, and most people use it wrong. Here's what happened when I started using it properly, and what you should know before you try.
So you searched for running shoes once, and now every app on your phone is showing you sneaker ads. That's not coincidence. Here's the machinery behind digital ad tracking in India, and whether you can actually escape it.
A friend got spam-bombed after one IRCTC booking. Here's what happened, what these portals actually collect, and the casual fixes that keep your data from leaking everywhere.
Ever wonder how much your Android phone tells Google about you before you've even opened an app? Probably more than you'd be comfortable with. Here's how to set up your phone so it stops oversharing.
Most people assume AI in India is still experimental, mostly chatbots and Netflix suggestions. They're wrong. Indian companies are already using machine learning to decide your loan eligibility, set the prices you see online, and scan your face in public. Here's what that means for your data.
You probably spent 70,000 rupees or more on that iPhone. Yet most Indian users haven't touched half the privacy settings buried inside iOS. Here's a no-nonsense walkthrough of every toggle that matters, from App Tracking Transparency to Lockdown Mode.
Your browser is the gateway to the internet, and it can leak enormous amounts of personal data. Explore the best privacy-focused browsers available for Indian users.
I deleted my Flipkart app for a month. When I reinstalled it, the app already knew what I'd been browsing on Myntra. Here's the uncomfortable truth about how Indian tech companies follow you across the internet.
Those cookie pop-ups aren't just a European thing anymore. India's DPDP Act and IT Act rules now shape what websites must do about cookies — and most sites are getting it wrong.
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.