I hereby claim:
- I am lpellis on github.
- I am lpellis (https://keybase.io/lpellis) on keybase.
- I have a public key ASDzRksOYGYyiVwFcWxKrJU60uBwz6pj674TPFzltrcmrQo
To claim this, I am signing this object:
| import dotenv from 'dotenv'; | |
| dotenv.config({path: '.env'}); | |
| import puppeteer from "puppeteer"; | |
| const html = ` | |
| ============<br> | |
| List every hygiene tip from the collection, with a short sentence summary.<br> | |
| List the titles *EXACTLY* as in the text<br> |
| Every now and then I get reminded about the vast fraud apparatus of the internet, re-invigorating my pursuit of basic digital hygiene around privacy/security of day to day computing. The sketchiness starts with major tech companies who are incentivized to build comprehensive profiles of you, to monetize it directly for advertising, or sell it off to professional data broker companies who further enrich, de-anonymize, cross-reference and resell it further. Inevitable and regular data breaches eventually runoff and collect your information into dark web archives, feeding into a whole underground spammer / scammer industry of hacks, phishing, ransomware, credit card fraud, identity theft, etc. This guide is a collection of the most basic digital hygiene tips, starting with the most basic to a bit more niche. | |
| Password manager. Your passwords are your "first factor", i.e. "something you know". Do not be a noob and mint new, unique, hard passwords for every website or service that you sign up with. Combine this wi |
| <a href="javascript:$('.table td').css('white-space', 'normal')">Expand History</a> |
I hereby claim:
To claim this, I am signing this object: