Your First 5 Privacy Wins (60 Minutes Total) #
No technical skills needed. Maximum impact. Start now.
These five actions will immediately improve your privacy and security—without overwhelming complexity or major life changes.
Total Time: ~60 minutes
Cost: $0 (all free tools)
Impact: Protects against 80% of common privacy threats
✅ Win #1: Install a Password Manager (15 minutes) #
Why This Matters #
The Problem:
- Average person has 100+ online accounts
- 65% of people reuse passwords across sites
- One data breach = all accounts compromised
The Solution:
Password managers generate unique, strong passwords for every account and remember them for you.
Step-by-Step: Bitwarden Setup #
1. Install Bitwarden (5 minutes)
Desktop:
- Go to: https://bitwarden.com
- Click “Get Started” → “Create Account”
- Choose a strong master password (this is the ONE password you need to remember)
- ✅ Good:
Correct-Horse-Battery-Staple-2024! - ❌ Bad:
password123 - Download browser extension (Chrome, Firefox, Brave, etc.)
Mobile:
- Download Bitwarden app (iOS App Store / Google Play)
- Log in with same account
2. Import Existing Passwords (5 minutes)
From Chrome:
- Chrome → Settings → Passwords → Export Passwords
- Save CSV file
- Bitwarden → Tools → Import Data → Select “Chrome CSV” → Upload file
- Delete CSV file after import (sensitive data!)
From Firefox:
- Firefox → Settings → Privacy & Security → Logins and Passwords → Export
- Repeat import process above
3. Generate New Passwords for Critical Accounts (5 minutes)
Priority accounts to update NOW:
- Email (Gmail, Outlook, etc.)
- Banking
- Social media (Facebook, Instagram, Twitter)
- Work/school accounts
- Password manager itself
How:
- Visit site → Click “Change Password”
- Click Bitwarden extension → “Generate Password”
- Save new password in Bitwarden
- Update account
✅ You’re Done When:
- Bitwarden installed on phone + computer
- Top 5 accounts have unique, strong passwords
- Old passwords deleted from browser
Next: Over the next week, update remaining accounts (10-20 per day).
Full Guide: Password Manager Deep Dive (3.7.2)
✅ Win #2: Enable Two-Factor Authentication (10 minutes) #
Why This Matters #
The Problem:
Passwords alone can be stolen, guessed, or leaked. 2FA adds a second layer—even if someone has your password, they can’t access your account.
The Solution:
2FA requires a second verification (code from your phone) to log in.
Step-by-Step: 2FA Setup #
1. Choose an Authenticator App (3 minutes)
Recommended (pick one):
- Aegis (Android, open-source, encrypted backups)
- 2FAS (iOS/Android, open-source)
- Authy (cross-platform, cloud backup)
❌ Avoid: Google Authenticator (no backup feature)
Install:
- Download from App Store / Google Play
- Open app (no account needed)
2. Enable 2FA on Critical Accounts (7 minutes)
Priority accounts:
- Banking
- Password manager (Bitwarden)
- Social media
- Work accounts
Example: Gmail 2FA
- Go to: https://myaccount.google.com/security
- Scroll to “2-Step Verification” → Click “Get Started”
- Enter password
- Choose “Authenticator app” (NOT SMS—SIM swapping risk)
- Scan QR code with Aegis/2FAS/Authy
- Enter 6-digit code to confirm
- SAVE BACKUP CODES (print or store in Bitwarden)
Repeat for other accounts.
Pro Tip: Backup Codes
Every 2FA setup provides backup codes (usually 10 one-time codes). Save these in Bitwarden under “Notes” for each account. If you lose your phone, you can still log in.
✅ You’re Done When:
- 2FA app installed
- Top 5 accounts protected with 2FA
- Backup codes saved
Full Guide: 2FA Deep Dive (2.7.3)
✅ Win #3: Switch to a Privacy Browser (5 minutes) #
Why This Matters #
The Problem:
Google Chrome tracks everything you do online and sells that data to advertisers. Microsoft Edge does the same.
The Solution:
Privacy-focused browsers block trackers, don’t sell your data, and respect your freedom.
Step-by-Step: Install Firefox or Brave #
Option A: Firefox (Most Customizable)
- Download: https://www.mozilla.org/firefox/
- Install and open
- Set as default browser
- Install extensions:
- uBlock Origin (blocks ads + trackers)
- Privacy Badger (blocks invisible trackers)
- HTTPS Everywhere (forces encrypted connections)
- Settings → Privacy & Security → “Strict” tracking protection
- Disable telemetry: Settings → Privacy & Security → Uncheck “Allow Firefox to send data to Mozilla”
Option B: Brave (Built-in Privacy)
- Download: https://brave.com
- Install and set as default
- Settings → Shields → “Aggressive” mode
- Disable telemetry: Settings → Privacy → Uncheck all data sharing
Change Default Search Engine:
Both Firefox and Brave:
- Settings → Search → Default Search Engine → Choose DuckDuckGo or Startpage
- (Avoid Google, Bing)
Import Bookmarks/Passwords:
- Firefox: File → Import Bookmarks and Data → Select Chrome/Edge
- Brave: Same process in Settings → Import
✅ You’re Done When:
- New browser installed
- Privacy extensions active (Firefox) or Shields enabled (Brave)
- Default search engine = DuckDuckGo or Startpage
- Bookmarks imported
Bonus: Uninstall Chrome/Edge after confirming everything works.
Full Guide: Browser Privacy Comparison (3.3.1)
✅ Win #4: Review Phone App Permissions (10 minutes) #
Why This Matters #
The Problem:
Your flashlight app doesn’t need access to your contacts, camera, microphone, and location—but many apps request (and get) these permissions anyway.
The Solution:
Audit and revoke unnecessary permissions.
Step-by-Step: Android #
- Settings → Apps → See All Apps
- Tap each app → Permissions
- Revoke these unless absolutely necessary:
- Location (especially “Allow all the time”)
- Camera
- Microphone
- Contacts
- Phone (call logs)
- SMS
Red Flags:
- Flashlight app with camera/mic access → Delete
- Game with contacts access → Revoke
- Free VPN with SMS access → Delete immediately
Step-by-Step: iOS #
- Settings → Privacy & Security
- Review each category:
- Location Services → Set to “While Using App” or “Never”
- Camera / Microphone → Revoke for non-essential apps
- Contacts → Limit to communication apps only
- Settings → Privacy & Security → Tracking → Disable “Allow Apps to Request to Track”
Bonus: Disable Ad Tracking
Android:
- Settings → Google → Ads → Delete Advertising ID
iOS:
- Already disabled if you followed step above
✅ You’re Done When:
- Shady apps deleted
- Unnecessary permissions revoked
- Ad tracking disabled
Full Guide: Mobile Privacy Settings (2.5.4)
✅ Win #5: Delete One Big Tech Account (20 minutes) #
Why This Matters #
The Problem:
Every account is a data collection point. The fewer accounts you have, the smaller your attack surface.
The Solution:
Delete at least ONE account you don’t actively use.
Easy Targets (Pick One) #
Low-Hanging Fruit:
- Old Facebook account you never check
- Twitter/X account you don’t use
- TikTok
- Unused Gmail accounts
- Reddit throwaway accounts
- LinkedIn (if not job hunting)
How to Delete (Example: Facebook) #
- Download your data first (if you want it):
- Settings → Your Facebook Information → Download Your Information
- Wait for email (takes a few days)
- Delete account:
- Settings → Your Facebook Information → Deactivation and Deletion
- Choose “Delete Account” (NOT deactivate)
- Confirm
- Don’t log in for 30 days (or deletion cancels)
Other Platforms #
Twitter/X:
Settings → Account → Deactivate Account
TikTok:
Settings → Manage Account → Delete Account
Instagram:
Accounts Center → Personal Details → Account Ownership → Deactivation or Deletion
Google Account (CAREFUL):
Only if you’re ready to lose Gmail, Drive, Photos, etc.
myaccount.google.com → Data & Privacy → Delete your Google Account
Can’t Delete Yet? Lockdown Instead:
- Delete all posts
- Remove profile photo
- Change name to random letters
- Revoke all app permissions
- Set to private
- Uninstall mobile app
✅ You’re Done When:
- At least one account deleted
- Confirmation email received
- Mobile app uninstalled
Bonus: Use JustDelete.me to find deletion links for hundreds of services.
Full Guide: Digital Footprint Audit (2.9.4)
🎉 You Did It! #
What You Just Accomplished: #
✅ Password Manager → Unique passwords for every account (Layer 5)
✅ 2FA → Second layer of defense (Layer 5)
✅ Privacy Browser → Blocks trackers (Layer 2)
✅ Phone Permissions → Limits app surveillance (Layer 2)
✅ Account Deletion → Reduced attack surface (Layer 7)
Privacy Score Increase: +20-30 points (from 40 → 60-70)
What’s Next? #
Continue the Momentum:
→ 7-Day Privacy Kickstart (1.2.2) – Daily tasks for the next week
→ 30-Day Privacy Challenge (1.2.3) – Full transformation in one month
Go Deeper:
→ Privacy App Swaplist (1.2.4) – Replace Gmail, WhatsApp, Google Drive, etc.
→ Beginner’s Roadmap (1.3.2) – 3-6 month plan
Get Support:
→ Join Free Community (5.1.1) – Share wins, ask questions
→ Find Local Privacy Node (5.2.2) – Connect in person
Remember: Privacy is a practice, not a destination. Small wins compound. You’re already ahead of 90% of people.
Keep going. 🔒