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Resources (v2) - All Generations Technology
Privacy Tips

Take Back Your Digital Privacy

Your phone knows more about you than your closest friends. Here are 18 actionable steps to reclaim your privacy — starting right now.

1. The “Invisible” Listener

Ever talked about “blue shoes” and seen an ad 5 minutes later? It’s not a coincidence, and they aren’t “listening” to your voice.

They’re tracking your ultrasonic cross-device pings.

Your phone emits sounds you can’t hear to talk to your smart TV and laptop.

Let’s kill that first.

2. Kill the “Significant Locations”

Your iPhone/Android keeps a hidden list of everywhere you go: your gym, your job, your “secret” spots.

iOS: Settings → Privacy → Location Services → System Services
→ Significant Locations.
 
Action: Clear History and turn it OFF. Stop giving them your routine on a silver platter.
 

3. The “Name Your Phone”

Is your phone named “John’s iPhone”? Every public Wi-Fi and Bluetooth scanner in a 50ft radius now knows your name.

Change it to “System-Error-404” or “Pixel-Null.”
 
Don’t broadcast your identity to every stranger in the coffee shop.

4. Lockdown the Microphone (The Real Way)

Apps don’t need 24/7 access. Go to your Privacy Dashboard and look for “Microphone.”

If a game, a calculator, or a retail app has access, toggle it off.

If an app requires it to function, set it to “Only while using the app.”
 

5. Scrub your EXIF Data

Every photo you send contains “Metadata”: the exact GPS coordinates, the time, and the device used.

When you post a “home cooked meal,” you’re posting your home address to the world.

Go to photo settings and Disable Location Metadata before sharing.

6. The “App Tracking Transparency” Audit

Since 2021, Apple lets you “Ask App Not to Track.” But many apps find workarounds through “Fingerprinting.”

Go to Settings → Privacy → Tracking. Ensure “Allow Apps to Request to Track” is OFF.
 
Global denial is the only way to stay clean.

7. Reset your Advertising ID

Your “Ad ID” is a digital string that links your behavior across different apps.

Think of it as your “Digital Social Security Number” for marketers.

Go to Privacy → Advertising → Reset Advertising Identifier.
 
Do this once a month to “confuse” the algorithms.

8. Use “Privacy Relay” or a No-Log VPN

Your ISP (Internet Service Provider) sees every site you visit.

In many countries, they sell this browsing history legally.

Use iCloud Private Relay or a reputable No-Log VPN (Mullvad or Proton).

Mask your IP. Encrypt your tunnel.

9. The “Background App Refresh” Vampire

Apps “phone home” while you sleep.

They send data packets about your battery level, connection, and location.

Settings → General → Background App Refresh → OFF.

This saves your battery and stops the silent data leaks.

10. Ditch the “Default” Browser

Safari and Chrome are built by the world’s biggest data collectors.

Switch to Brave or DuckDuckGo Browser.
 
They block trackers, scripts, and “fingerprinting” by default. It’s like browsing with a shield.

11. Purge your “Predictive Text” Dictionary

Your Phone learns your slang, your passwords (if you type them), and your secrets to “help” you type faster.

This “Learning” file is a goldmine for forensic tools.

Settings → General → Transfer or Reset → Reset Keyboard Dictionary.
 
Start fresh.

12. Disable “Raise to Wake”

It seems harmless, but “Raise to Wake” makes it too easy for someone to snatch your phone and keep the screen active.

It also accidentally triggers “Attention Awareness” checks.

Turn it off. Tap to Wake is safer.

13. The “Mail Privacy Protection”

Marketers use “Tracking Pixels” in emails to see when/where you opened them.

Settings → Mail → Privacy Protection → Protect Mail Activity.

This masks your IP address so they can’t build a profile on your reading habits.

14. Stop “Auto-Join” Wi-Fi
Your phone is constantly screaming “Is ‘Starbucks-Guest’ there?”


Hackers use “Pineapples” to pretend to be that network.

Your phone connects automatically, and they intercept your data.

Disable “Auto-Join Hotspots” in Wi-Fi settings.

15. The “Lockdown Mode” (The Nuclear Option)

If you are traveling or feel targeted, enable Lockdown Mode.

It’s an extreme level of security that blocks most message attachments, web technologies, and wired connections.

It turns your smartphone into a “Dumb-phone” fortress.

16. Audit your “Backups”

If your phone is encrypted but your Cloud Backup isn’t, you’re not protected.

Ensure Advanced Data Protection (iOS) is on.
 
This enables End-to-End Encryption for your backups.

If the cloud provider gets hacked, your data remains scrambled code.

17. The “SIM PIN”

If someone steals your phone, they can put your SIM card into another phone and get your 2FA text codes.

Go to Settings → Cellular → SIM PIN.
 
Now, your SIM card is useless without a 4-digit code.

18. The “Monthly Digital Dusting”

Every 30 Days, delete 5 apps you haven’t used.

Less apps = Less “Attack Surface.”
 
A clean phone is a fast phone. A fast phone is a secure phone.

Resources

Trusted resources designed to strengthen your understanding of tech, privacy, and the digital world.

AfroTech
Leading platform highlighting Black professionals in technology
Covers startups, venture capital, AI, and corporate leadership
Strong visibility for Black innovation ecosystems
Black Enterprise – Technology
Business and technology coverage focused on Black entrepreneurs
Features tech founders, funding news, and digital transformation
EdSurge
Technology in education across K–12 and adult learning
Insights on digital tools, remote learning, and workforce upskilling
Strong alignment with intergenerational learning models
Brookings Institution – Artificial Intelligence & Emerging Tech
Policy-level analysis of AI governance and societal impact
Supports higher-level thought leadership pieces
Nielsen Norman Group (UX Research Blog)
Research-backed insights on usability and accessibility
Critical for content around inclusive design across age groups
Helps inform platform improvements
Common Sense Media – Technology & Digital Citizenship
Digital literacy, online safety, and media education
Helpful for family-focused and intergenerational engagement topics
TechSoup Blog
Technology resources for nonprofits and community organizations
Practical tools for digital transformation and capacity building
Strong alignment if AGT partners with community-based programs
Pew Research Center – Internet & Technology
Data-driven insights on technology adoption across age groups

Trends in digital literacy, social media use, and device access

Strong research foundation for intergenerational tech discussions
MIT Technology Review
Expert analysis on AI, cybersecurity, digital transformation, and emerging tools
Accessible but authoritative tone suitable for diverse audiences
Great for curated summaries tailored to AGT readers
AARP Technology Blog
Practical guidance for older adults navigating technology
Online safety, devices, digital tools, and tech empowerment
Directly aligned with multi-generational tech education
AfroTech
Leading platform highlighting Black professionals in technology
Covers startups, venture capital, AI, and corporate leadership
Strong visibility for Black innovation ecosystems
Black Enterprise – Technology
Business and technology coverage focused on Black entrepreneurs
Features tech founders, funding news, and digital transformation
EdSurge
Technology in education across K–12 and adult learning
Insights on digital tools, remote learning, and workforce upskilling
Strong alignment with intergenerational learning models
Brookings Institution – Artificial Intelligence & Emerging Tech
Policy-level analysis of AI governance and societal impact
Supports higher-level thought leadership pieces
Nielsen Norman Group (UX Research Blog)
Research-backed insights on usability and accessibility
Critical for content around inclusive design across age groups
Helps inform platform improvements
Common Sense Media – Technology & Digital Citizenship
Digital literacy, online safety, and media education
Helpful for family-focused and intergenerational engagement topics
TechSoup Blog
Technology resources for nonprofits and community organizations
Practical tools for digital transformation and capacity building
Strong alignment if AGT partners with community-based programs
Pew Research Center – Internet & Technology
Data-driven insights on technology adoption across age groups

Trends in digital literacy, social media use, and device access

Strong research foundation for intergenerational tech discussions
MIT Technology Review
Expert analysis on AI, cybersecurity, digital transformation, and emerging tools
Accessible but authoritative tone suitable for diverse audiences
Great for curated summaries tailored to AGT readers
AARP Technology Blog
Practical guidance for older adults navigating technology
Online safety, devices, digital tools, and tech empowerment
Directly aligned with multi-generational tech education