A process that started roughly a year ago with just changing browser and search engine, now feeling that I got somewhere. The journey ended up being more than just degoogle, but also demetaing and taking more control over my data and privacy.

Before and after picture with notes:

Chrome -> Zen browser (Firefox on iOS)

Google -> Qwant

Gmail -> Proton Mail

NordVPN -> Proton VPN (I don’t use VPN very often, but have NordVPN through another subscription, now replaced with Proton across my devices)

Google Drive / Photos -> Proton Drive

Google Password Manager -> Proton Pass

Google Authenticator -> Proton Pass / Ente (Ente Auth is only used to store my 2FA keys for the Proton account, other keys are stored in Proton Pass)

Google Translator -> DeepL

YouTube -> FreeTube (Unwatched on iOS)

Google Maps -> Magic Earth (OSM on desktop)

WhatsApp -> Signal

Notion -> Anytype

Keep / Notes -> Notesnook

X -> Mastodon / Bluesky

Reddit -> Lemmy (Voyager on iOS, dreaming of an eventual complete migration)

Instagram -> Pixelfed

Facebook -> stopped using

Windows 11 -> Ubuntu (Only personal laptop, work laptop still windows)

  • @rumba@lemmy.zip
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    112 hours ago

    Apple already proved they’ll roll over for the EU on encryption backdoors.

    If it comes down to them selling in the US or not selling in the US, they’re going to roll over and do whatever the government demands.

    They’re all so holding all of your data, metrics, and browsing habits securely in their hands.

    When the government demands baggacips data, they’re going to hand it over, the same as Google would.

    And none of this is ever a problem until the government goes kind of fascist. When browsing privacy subs on Lemmy becomes an act of treason…

    Even if I’m not doing anything wrong or illegal, I sure as hell I’m not going to send my data through a VPN that logs and is known to comply with foreign court requests.

    You can in fact drive yourself insane trying to stay private and secure, But I do know that trusting a single gigantic monolithic company that operates in a questionable regime to protect you from government entities is a losing battle.

    • @smeg@feddit.uk
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      29 hours ago

      Apple already proved they’ll roll over for the EU on encryption backdoors.

      Did they? They explicitly made a big deal about not doing that for the UK government’s request.

      • @OhNoMoreLemmy@lemmy.ml
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        18 hours ago

        They said they would remove all encryption rather than installing a backdoor.

        It’s good that this attracted some attention, but they still agreed to removed all the protections the UK requested.