Tag: Digital Hygiene

  • Weekly Digital Clean-up

    Creating a Weekly Digital Clean-up Schedule

    New month means new habits! What better way to kick off the month of March by getting into the habit of having a weekly digital clean-up?

    I teach a workshop on cybersecurity for the rest of us. (Sign up for the workshop here or buy the slide deck here.) In that workshop, I lecture on ways to protect yourself online, from freezing your credit, getting dark web notifications, and using a VPN (and a whole lot more).

    It’s become a very popular workshop, but it got me thinking: having digital hygiene is more than freezing your credit or knowing about social media engineering; it’s also about keeping active on unsubscribing from unread mailing lists, power cycling your laptop, and more.

    And even better? A checklist is involved!

    Let’s dive in!

    What is a digital clean-up?

    A digital clean-up is when you actively and regularly keep your digital presence in tiptop condition. Example? Clearing your browser cache regularly or keeping the software on your phone current are ways to perform digital clean-up.

    How often should I perform a digital clean-up?

    Short answer: weekly!

    And to get you in the mood for when to do it, plan on Sunday as you get ready for the week. It shouldn’t take you more than an hour to go through the checklist, and that’s on the wide end.

    New week, new you!

    What is involved with a digital clean-up?

    There is a checklist!

    Here are 14 things to do weekly to keep your digital presence in peak condition!

    1. From your inbox, select five pieces of retail newsletters you haven’t read in over a month and click unsubscribe.
    2. Power cycle your wifi router.
    3. Power cycle your laptop/desktop/device.
    4. Close any browser tabs you haven’t looked at in over 48 hours.
    5. Double check to make sure you have thrown anything in your computer’s trash bin you may still need.
    6. Check your phone’s home screen and delete any app you haven’t used in 30 days. You can always download it again later.
    7. Turn off notifications for any apps that you don’t need such as the game who notifies you to come back and play.
    8. Check, and apply, any updates to your computer’s operating system or apps (same goes with phones, too!).
    9. Check Apple App Store or Google Play Store for any subscriptions you may not be using and cancel.
    10. Once you’ve double checked your trash bin, empty it.
    11. Check your Downloads folder and delete anything you don’t recognize or move into a specific folder like Documents.
    12. Open your phone’s camera roll and delete 10 blurry photos or videos.
    13. Clear your browser cache.
    14. Backup your data using the 3-2-1 method.

    Anything else?

    Nope, that’s it! It may take you longer the first time or two when you do this, but once you get in the swing of things, it’ll be done in a blink of an eye.

    Tip: Set a weekly reminder in your reminder app so you won’t forget!

    Lastly, if you want the checklist in one handy dandy location, I’ve got you covered! Sign up for Nerd Girl Industries Presents, the bi-weekly NGI newsletter, and the checklist will be in your inbox lickity split.

  • Data Privacy Week 2026

    Data Privacy Week 2026

    Thankfully, for me, a lot is going on in January (and not just dry January either) that’s giving me a lot of content! We’ve talked about Public Domain Day, Women in Tech, and Wikipedia Day. We’re ending the month on Data Privacy Week.

    What is Data Privacy Week?

    Data Privacy Week is the annual celebration of protecting and spreading awareness of online (and offline) privacy.

    How do we define “data?”

    Your email, social media accounts, and communities you’re involved in have your data. Your car, watch, and even your home appliances have your data. The content that you post online, from memes to videos to text, is also your data. Even snail mail from trusted sources is data.

    In theory, and in a perfect world, your data should only be owned by you and it should also be private. However, we do not live in a perfect world, so instead, we learn how to protect ourselves, and our data, online.

    Why is data privacy important?

    Data about you is used to determine:

    • Your socioeconomic status
    • Where you live
    • What race and gender you are
    • Preferences

    As mentioned, in a perfect world, the data about you should be owned by you, but in reality, it is not. Companies and advertisers use the data they collect to make assumptions about your potential needs and wants. An example would be how you interact with accounts and ads on Instagram informs the algorithm what other accounts and ads for you to make future purchases or to follow.

    How do I manage my data privacy?

    The National Cybersecurity Alliance has you covered. Here is a very robust list, with links, to online platforms from Amazon to Zelle on how to manage your privacy settings for each service.

    How do I control my data?

    Here are a few simple steps you can start with right now to control how your data is collected, stored, and used.

    • When creating, updating, or agreeing to services, think about what is convenience over privacy. Does that service need to know something about you that is irrelevant to the service such as your phone number?
    • Can you access privacy controls for those accounts and services to modify to meet your needs?
    • If an app or service is asking you for something, such as why does Google Chrome need to know my bluetooth devices or Candy Crush my contacts, ask why they need to know that data before agreeing.

    What are ways to protect myself on and offline?

    Aren’t you in luck! I teach an hour long workshop, Digital Hygiene: Cybersecurity for the Rest of Us ($99).

    If taking a workshop isn’t up your alley, the workshop’s slide deck is available ($19). The deck gives you everything from the workshop in one convenient and easy to reference doc.

    Interest piqued? What’s in the workshop (and slide deck):

    • Different scams from social engineering to password cracking
    • Creating strong passwords and using a password manager
    • What a VPN is and why you should use it
    • Freezing your credit report and using a free Google service to keep tabs of yourself online
    • Links to resources recommended as well as other best practices

    This is just the tip of the iceberg!

    This all sounds kind of scary!

    It can be scary but by being smart, using best practices, and keeping an eye on your data, you can safely enjoy your time online.

    References