AI & Machine Learning

Privacy tools everyone should use in 2026 — because Big Tech is not your friend

I am not a tinfoil hat person. I work in tech. But the amount of data being collected about you in 2026 is staggering. Here are the practical tools to take back some control without becoming a hermit.

Browser:

  • Firefox with uBlock Origin. Chrome is literally an advertising company's browser. Firefox blocks trackers by default and uBlock Origin removes ads and tracking scripts.
  • Brave if you want a Chromium-based browser with built-in ad blocking.
  • Skip: Chrome, Edge (both send telemetry to Google/Microsoft by default).

Search:

  • DuckDuckGo — No tracking, no filter bubbles. Add !g to any search to get Google results if DuckDuckGo misses.
  • Brave Search — Fully independent search index. No Google dependency.
  • Kagi ($5/month) — Premium search with no ads, no tracking. Worth it if you search a lot.

Email:

  • Proton Mail (free tier) — End-to-end encrypted. Based in Switzerland. Google cannot read your emails.
  • SimpleLogin (now owned by Proton) — Email aliases. Give every service a different email address. When one gets spammed, kill the alias.

Messaging:

  • Signal — End-to-end encrypted, open source, no metadata collection. This is the gold standard.
  • Stop using SMS for anything sensitive. SMS is sent in plaintext and your carrier stores it.

VPN:

  • Mullvad ($5/month) — No account needed. Pay with cash or crypto. Audited. Based in Sweden.
  • ProtonVPN (free tier available) — Good free option.
  • Skip: free VPNs (they sell your data) and NordVPN/ExpressVPN (privacy claims are marketing, not technical guarantees).

Phone:

  • iPhone: go to Settings > Privacy > Tracking and turn off "Allow Apps to Request to Track."
  • Android: Settings > Privacy > Ads > Delete advertising ID.
  • Both: audit app permissions. Your flashlight app does not need your contacts.

DNS:

  • Change your DNS to NextDNS or 1.1.1.1 (Cloudflare). Your ISP DNS logs every website you visit. Your ISP in DFW is most likely Spectrum or AT&T and they sell browsing data to advertisers. Source: FCC broadband privacy rules were repealed in 2017.

Sources:

  • EFF Surveillance Self-Defense guide (eff.org)
  • PrivacyGuides.org — community-maintained tool recommendations
  • Mozilla Foundation — browser privacy research
  • FCC — broadband privacy regulation history

What would you do?

Community ReportAutomatedSource: Community ReportPublished: Apr 4, 2026, 2:24 AM

5 Comments

Your ISP selling your browsing data is the part people do not know about. Spectrum and AT&T in DFW absolutely do this. Change your DNS today.

Firefox + uBlock Origin is the real hero here. I cannot believe people still browse the web without an ad blocker. The internet is unusable without one.

The SimpleLogin alias trick is brilliant. I have 200+ aliases. When a company gets breached, I know exactly who leaked because each one has a unique alias. Then I just delete that alias.

Signal for messaging is non-negotiable for anything you want to keep private. The FBI literally cannot read Signal messages even with a warrant because the data does not exist on Signal's servers.

Changing DNS to NextDNS was the single easiest privacy improvement I made. Took 2 minutes on my router and now my ISP cannot see my browsing history. Also blocks ads at the network level.