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How To Protect Your Privacy On iPhone


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How To Protect Your Privacy On iPhone

 

You might also be interested in our privacy tips for Android.


Follow these easy steps to protect the personal data on your iPhone or iPad.


1. Lock your device with a passcode longer than 4 digits.


Let’s start off with the entry point to your phone — the passcode.


A custom one will give you the choice of alphanumeric characters and the ability to make it longer than the usual 4 characters.


How: Settings > Touch ID & Passcode > Change Passcode > Passcode Options

 

2. Enable “Erase Data” to delete data after 10 failed passcode attempts.


In the unlikely event your phone is stolen, you can reduce the risk of your data getting in the wrong hands by setting it to delete everything after 10 failed passcode attempts.


How: Settings > Touch ID & Passcode > Erase Data

 

3. Don’t show notifications in the lock screen for sensitive apps.


Even if your phone is not stolen, your private messages could be seen by others as notifications on the lock screen.


These notifications can be turned on or off for each app.


How: Settings > Notifications > [app name] > Show on Lock Screen

 

4. Turn off “Share My Location.”


Your phone goes everywhere with you and shares that information with family and friends.


Turning this off will protect your location data should your family and friends’ devices ever get into the wrong hands.


How: Settings > Privacy > Location Services > Share My Location

 

5. Turn off location services for things that don't need them.


Sometimes apps seem excessively hungry for our data, including location.


You can switch off their access to your location one by one.


You should also check access granted to built-in services that may be unnecessary.


How: Settings > Privacy > Location Services (> optionally System Services)

 

6. Turn off access to sensitive data for apps that don’t need it.


Similarly, you can restrict access to your most private data from apps that don’t need it, for example access to your contacts, calendar, photos, etc.


How: Settings > Privacy > Contacts, etc.

 

7. Review your installed apps.


To further reduce your exposure to privacy leaks, take a few moments to check every app on your device and remove any you no longer use.


How: Long-press any app icon on the home screen. Alternatively, Settings > General > Storage & iCloud Usage > Manage Storage

 

8. Turn off read receipts so people are not notified when you see their messages.


This is more a personal preference, but you may not want senders to see when you have read their message.


How: Settings > Messages > Send Read Receipts

 

9. Turn on “Limit ad tracking”.


Ad tracking is used by advertising networks to target ads at you in apps.


Limiting this restricts tracking of ads across apps.


How: Settings > Privacy > Advertising

 

10.From time-to-time, reset your advertising identifier.


The above “Limit ad tracking” setting relies on the honesty of app developers.


You can add an extra layer of privacy protection by resetting the ad identifier for your device.
How: Settings > Privacy > Advertising > Reset Advertising Identifier

 

11. Set DuckDuckGo as your default search engine.


DuckDuckGo is the non-tracking search engine that doesn’t collect or share your personal information.


How: For Safari go to Settings > Safari > Search Engine > DuckDuckGo. For other mobile browsers see our help pages.

 

12. Install the DuckDuckGo Privacy Browser.


Our mobile app has built-in tracker network blocking, smarter encryption, and, of course, private search, all designed to operate seamlessly together while you search and browse the web.


How: Get the app from

https://duckduckgo.com/app


 

Congratulations!


You’ve just taken a big step to increasing mobile privacy and protecting the data on your iPhone or iPad.


You might also be interested in our privacy tips for Android.


? You can also download a printable PDF of all these tips.


https://duckduckgo.com/download/iPhone_Privacy_Tips.pdf


https://spreadprivacy.com/iphone-privacy-tips/


RELATED:

https://spreadprivacy.com/android-privacy-tips/

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You can have absolute privacy on any phone....just never turn it on.  Once you turn it on you have no privacy.  And I am not trying to be facetious, that is the honest truth.  But then how many times have you heard people speaking on their phones in public like they were in a private cocoon that no one outside of it could hear.  I love to just stare at those people and act like I am listening intently to every word and watch them get angry.  If people cared about their privacy they wouldn't use phones in public where they can be intercepted so easily, even with a tiny device no bigger than an old flip phone that I carry in a cell phone pouch on my waist that records their passwords and data without any action on my part other than just walking around.

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You may use any tools and techniques as soon as you are connected to the Internet, you will no longer be alone. Everything is public.
Of course, nobody will listen to you and nobody will care about with who you are talking about.
Quite important is the density of calls and their changes. Where does the call come from and where it goes.
Only then, when somebody suspected something, "they" will begin to listen to your calls and watch videos, stored by your phone. Many probably do not know that their phone saves both a picture and sound, if necessary, and you can not stop it in any way.
True, the only way is just throw the phone into the sea.

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