I recently volunteered to teach an “intro to mobile security” class, in-person, at a local shul (Jewish prayer/study space) in my rural, aging community. I’m going to do one class for activists and one for the general public. I know I want to end with a list of privacy-friendly alternatives and habits, but I’m kinda stuck getting started. How do I introduce this topic, especially to older folks? Links, resources, personal thoughts welcome. Lmk if you don’t want to be credited.

  • @stopit@lemmy.ml
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    43 years ago

    Not to be a downer…but can one be private on a mobile device? I’m older (and if in your area, probably a target participant, sorry that I can’t actually help) but, my understanding is that mobile would be impossible to be private due to constant triangulation etc.

    • @radnek_36@lemmy.mlOP
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      33 years ago

      Right, I’m definitely gonna cover that. There are ways to limit triangulation and the amount of data that can be collected, but you’re correct: the best mobile device security is not having one. The subtitle of the class is going to be, “a 101 for people who need phones,” so I will be working on the assumption that getting rid of the phone is not a viable precaution. (Also, my co-presenter is also an older person, so don’t sell yourself short!)