It’s the Digital Security Training team at Freedom of the Press Foundation (FPF), with security news that keeps you, your sources, and your devices safe. If someone has shared this newsletter with you, please subscribe here.
In the news
We recently shared news of Mozilla’s partnership with data removal service Onerep. Through a service it calls Mozilla Monitor Plus, Onerep is designed to automatically scan for personal information on data broker websites — services that aggregate and sell data about private individuals, such as addresses, phone numbers, names of family members, and even purchase histories. But journalist Brian Krebs has found evidence that the founder of Onerep, purveyor of anti-data broker services, himself created dozens of data broker services. Read more.
What you can do
- It’s pretty disappointing to hear this news, especially having highlighted the service earlier. But it’s also an opportunity to talk about how not to take the promises or histories of any particular tool as gospel. While I wish every time I mentioned a tool it just stayed unproblematic, the reality is that we learn more about services in our security toolkit all the time. The services will change, we will learn more about them, and we will assess if they have become more or less reliable for our needs. So we hope journalists will use examples like this to understand the changing nature of the security space and find the tools that work best at the moment those tools are needed.
- OK, I just gave you advice about not being married to any one service. All the same, an anti-data broker service that works well right now in about a dozen countries is DeleteMe, which allows you to have personal data removed from data brokers. It’s not cheap though — roughly $129 each year.
- Also, you can manually remove yourself (for free!) from a variety of data brokers by following instructions listed in Yael Grauer's Big Ass Data Broker Opt-Out List.
Updates from my team
- We recently updated our Spanish-language guides to Signal for beginners and Locking down Signal to incorporate Signal’s new username and phone number privacy changes.
We are always ready to assist journalists with digital security concerns. Reach out here, and stay safe and secure out there.
Best,
Martin