Whenever you search the internet, write on a social media platform, make online purchases, or subscribe to some service, you create an online trail. This data trail is gathered, stored, resold, and analyzed, and sometimes without your conscious attention. It is now more than ever important to understand your digital footprint and how to diminish or erase it.
There is truth to data breaches, identity theft, and unwanted surveillance, which afflict millions of Americans every year. This manual provides you with some actionable steps that you can implement to control your online footprint and get your online privacy back.
What Is a Digital Footprint?
The presence of information on the internet is known as your digital footprint which is a compilation of information that is available about you due to your online activity. It encompasses all your browsing history and social media postings as well as your email address, purchases history, and your location.
There are two main types of digital footprints:
Active online presence: Information that you provide on purpose, including social media posts, online forms, emails, and comments.
Passive digital footprint: Information that has been gathered without your participation, such as cookies, IP address tracking, location data in applications, and activities on websites.
All these pieces of information create a comprehensive portrait of who you are, what you enjoy, where you visit, and how you act. This is extremely useful to advertisers, data brokers and unfortunately bad actors.
Why Do You Care about Your Digital Footprint?
The effects of uncontrolled digital footprint may be mildly annoying to even damaging.
- Identity theft: With the personal information available, we can open fraudulent accounts in your name.
- Targeted manipulation: You are targeted with very specific advertising and even political messaging based on detailed behavioral profiles of you.
- Data broker exploitation: Data brokers, as companies, are companies that collect and sell your personal information, such as your address, income estimate and family members, to whoever wants to buy it.
- Trust lost: Years later, old social media posts, photos, or comments may be brought up on the job or in social situations.
- Vulnerabilities to security: Phishing or account takeover can be done with exposed passwords, security question answers or account information.
According to a 2024 report by the Identity Theft Resource Center, there were over 3,200 data breaches in the United States, exposing hundreds of millions of records. By acting to minimize your online presence, you are reducing the amount of risk you face.
How to Check Your Digital Footprint
You should be aware of what is already present before you can cut your digital footprint. Begin with the following steps of a digital footprint checker:
- Google yourself: Type in your full name, email, and phone number. Record all the results that emerge – these are data points, which are public.
- Check data broker websites: Websites such as Spokeo, WhitePages, BeenVerified, and Intelius probably know your address, family members, age, and other personal information.
- Adjust your social media privacy: Review what you see on the surface on Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, and other sites.
- Use haveibeenpwned.com: This is a free tool that indicates whether your email has been compromised in any of the known data breaches.
How To Delete Your Digital Footprint (Step by Step).
The first step is to take yourself off data broker websites.
The largest contributors to your revealed online presence are the data brokers. Unsubscribing to such sites must be done on a case-by-case basis. Some of the key websites to work with will be Spokeo, Whitepages, Intelius, PeopleFinder and Acxiom.
Otherwise, some apps, such as DeleteMe, Kanary or Privacy Bee, will do it automatically, asking to be removed on your behalf, and require a subscription fee.
Step 2: Delete Online Accounts that are not used.
Consider the number of services that you have subscribed to over the years- newsletters, applications, online shopping platforms, forums. All of them contain your personal information. Close down accounts that you no longer use systematically using Just Delete Me.com, a directory of links to account deletion pages of hundreds of services.
Step 3: Remove Personal Information from Google
Google has recently provided an option to demand the appearance of some personal information on the search results. Visit the Google Removal technology and make a request to remove the content that contains your home address, phone number, email, or financial information. Conclusions of third-party websites might involve reaching out to them.
Step 4: Review and Secure Social Media Privacy.
Check your privacy settings on all social media sites. Post only with friends, turn off location tagging, take your phone number and email address off of all public profiles, and delete any old posts that you no longer claim. This can be easily achieved using Facebook Privacy Checkup and Instagram Account Privacy features.
Step 5: Password Manager and Unique Emails.
Most individuals use the same email in dozens of accounts, and their online presence can be easily traced. With such a service as SimpleLogin or an option offered by Apple Hide My Email, you can generate an alias that you use with every account. Add this to a password manager such as Bitwarden or 1Password so that each account has a unique strong password.
Step 6: Use Blockers when Browsing.
Install a privacy-focused browser extension like uBlock Origin or Privacy Badger to block advertising trackers and cross-site cookies. You can also consider switching your default browser to Firefox or Brave, which have much more effective privacy protection than Chrome. Block tracking on the network level with a private DNS (Cloudflare 1.1.1.1 or NextDNS).
Step 7: Browsing with the VPN.
A Virtual Private Network (VPN) not only encrypts your internet traffic and covers your IP address, but also makes it significantly harder to trace your activity by websites and your internet provider. Some of the reputable ones are Mullvad, ProtonVPN and ExpressVPN. Free VPNs should be avoided as they tend to sell your information.
Having a Smaller Digital Footprint in the Future.
Untraceable is only half the battle. Forming good habits will make sure that it will not grow back fast.
- Search with DuckDuckGo or Brave Search as the default search engine.
- When possible, turn off data collection in any possible manner seek privacy settings in applications and websites.
- Before registering new services, read their privacy policies.
- Periodically update your knowledge of the apps that are accessing your location, camera, microphone, and contacts.
- Send Signal or Telegram as opposed to regular SMS.
Conclusion
The size of your digital footprint is bigger than you think, and its effect on privacy, security and personal reputation is substantial. The positive aspect is that it is perfectly possible to decrease and control your online presence using a systematic method. The first step is to look up your name on the Internet, delete your information on broker websites, shut down accounts that you do not use, and change social media privacy. Then develop more superior browsing habits in order to maintain a small footprint in the future. In the era of data being money, safeguarding your personal data is among the most intelligent investments that you will ever make.
