Authoritarians rely on distraction, especially on weekends. A digital safety reset helps activists reduce surveillance and protect their data before things escalate. This guide shows you how to secure your accounts, limit location tracking, and clean up your digital footprint. You do not need advanced technical skills. You just need a few minutes and a plan.
Skill Level: Beginner
This digital safety guide is designed for activists with no technical background. If you can use a phone or computer, you can complete these steps.
What This Tool Is
A Digital Safety Reset is a short, intentional routine that reduces your exposure to surveillance, data harvesting, doxxing, and digital targeting. It focuses on securing accounts, limiting location tracking, cleaning devices, and tightening communication habits. This is not about paranoia — it’s about minimizing risk in a hostile environment.
Why This Tool Is Important
Modern repression is automated. Agencies and contractors rely on metadata, old accounts, location logs, app permissions, and sloppy security long before anyone ever knocks on a door. Most people are not targeted because they did something dramatic — they’re flagged because their digital footprint made them easy to map. A regular reset dramatically lowers your risk and protects everyone connected to you.
Example of Why This Matters
Activists have been identified, tracked, and intimidated using nothing more than social media posts, app location data, and unsecured messaging apps. In multiple cases, location history and cloud backups were accessed without the person realizing the data even existed. A simple reset — turning off location sharing, removing unused apps, and securing accounts — would have closed those doors entirely.
Step-by-Step Instructions
Step 1: Secure Your Accounts
- Change passwords for email, social media, cloud storage, and financial apps
- Use a password manager and generate unique passwords
- Enable two-factor authentication using an authenticator app, not SMS
Step 2: Disable Location Tracking
- Turn off location access for non-essential apps
- Set permissions to “While Using” or “Never”
- Disable Bluetooth when not actively using it
- Pause or delete Google and Apple location history
Step 3: Audit and Remove Apps
- Delete apps you don’t actively use
- Remove games, “free” utilities, and novelty apps
- Uninstall anything requesting mic, camera, contacts, or full storage access without a clear reason
Step 4: Secure Messaging
- Move sensitive conversations to end-to-end encrypted messaging apps
- Enable disappearing messages where appropriate
- Never plan illegal actions digitally — ever
Step 5: Clean Your Social Media Footprint
- Remove photos with identifying metadata
- Avoid real-time location tagging
- Delay posting until after events
- Review privacy settings on all platforms
Step 6: Browser and Device Hygiene
- Update your operating system and browsers
- Install a reputable ad blocker and tracker blocker
- Clear cookies and revoke unknown site permissions
Step 7: Backup and Encrypt
- Back up critical files
- Encrypt sensitive documents
- Enable remote-wipe on your phone and devices
Resistance Kitty Says
You are not obligated to be convenient for systems built to watch you. Every privacy choice you make is an act of resistance — not just for yourself, but for everyone connected to you. Stay sharp. Stay private. Protect each other.
Digital safety for activists is about control, not fear. A short reset can prevent tracking, harassment, and data misuse. Making this a regular habit protects you and the people you organize with. Do this before the weekend. Share it with someone who needs it. Resistance works best when we protect each other.
