Simple Security Guidelines
Using an iDevice? (Best option)
- Use an iPod or an iPad without a SIM card
- Use an iPhone
- Do not jailbreak
- Always upgrade to new iOS versions
- Use Brave browser
Need Secure chat?
- Use Signal (iOS + Android)
- Use Wire (iOS + Android)
- Avoid desktop versions
- Optional: use an iPad [Pro] with a smart keyboard
- register Signal w/ a phone (burner, anonymous SIM, etc)
- register Wire w/ an email address (ProtonMail is free)
- Optional: use an iPad [Pro] with a smart keyboard
- Use Conversations w/ OMEMO (Android, unfortunately the only implementation of OMEMO for general use right now)
- Use Coy.im on desktops
- Do not use: Telegram, LINE, Kaokao, WeChat, Viber, Hangouts, etc.
- WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger (Private chat), are acceptible (high security, high surveillance)
Using Android?
- Do not root your device
- Do not enable Developer Mode
- Use a Nexus or Pixel (gets latest patches w/o carrier/vendor barrier)
- Run the latest version, always
- Optional: run CopperheadOS
- Optional: use a flagship Samsung (or Nokia) purchased direct, not through a telco
- These devices tend to get timely security updates
- Don't have a Nexus or Pixel? Install LineageOS (official builds only)
- Run the latest version, always
- Use Brave browser
Using a ChromeBook?
- Do not enable developer mode
- Use Termux for a console environment
Using Windows?
- Use 10 or 8.1, nothing earlier.
- Use EMET
Using Office?
- Do not enable macros. Ever.
- Find and disable Flash
Using macOS?
- Install patches and updates immediately
- Enable the firewall
- Disable "signed apps"
- Enable "block inbound"
- Optional: enable "stealth"
- Install Objective-see tools
- Do Not Disturb
- BlockBlock
- KnockKnock
- RandsomWhere
- Oversight
All:
- Enable full disk encryption (FDE)
- Require a password to unlock
- Apply patches
- Use backups. Secure your backups, they contain your secrets.
Use a password manager!
- Use KeePass, free, cross platform, but clunky UI/UX
- Use 1Password, not free, iOS/macOS, good UI/UX
- Never use a cloud based password manager
- Never enable integration between your browser and password manager
2FA
- Enable two factor authentication whenever possible
Web Browser
- Use Chrome
- Use Edge
- Do not use Safari
- Do not use IE
- Do not use Firefox, yet (until they enable sandbox by default)
Use an ad blocker
-
Install
uBlock Origin
-
Install
HTTPS Everywhere
-
Install
uBlock Origin Extra
-
Optional: Install
Privacy Badger
-
Disable Flash (on Chrome you can still right click to play)
Use a VPN
- (Self hosted option: algo) - Best
- ProtonVPN offers free VPN service - Ok
- CryptoStorm has a privacy preserving business model - OK
- Use WireGuard, self hosted, still new but very promising - Good
- Use Freedome (iOS, Android, macOS), not free, trivial to use - OK
What is so wrong with developer mode? That flag alone does nothing.
The real danger is in "enable apps from unknown sources" but that's reachable without developer mode.
Other things in developer mode that might be problematic:
However the latter is no worse than iTunes sync, given it equally requires an explicit authorization for the computer you connect with.
Or where I am wrong?
Note that the attack surface argument stands: don't enable USB debugging if you're not using adb for e.g. file transfer or actual debugging.