What is Internet privacy & why you should care

Our privacy online is under threat, but there is a lot we can do to protect ourselves

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Casey Ford, PhDCommunications Lead
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Ania M. Piotrowska, PhDTechnical reviewer
12 mins read
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More and more of our daily lives are happening online and increasingly facilitated by single devices like smartphones. What we might not easily see, however, are the ways that our personal and collective privacy is being compromised right under our noses.

It’s natural to expect that what we do online should be private: when we browse the web, send an email to a loved one, or make purchases, why should any of these things be different than going to a library, mailing a letter, or buying something in a store?

This article explains the evolving idea of internet privacy, why it is important, and what the main threats to privacy online are.

What is a VPN?

What is metadata?

Privacy isn't a setting

It's a practice. Start with the right tools.

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Internet privacy: FAQs

Privacy is multi-layered—VPNs encrypt and route traffic, while browser protection (e.g. anti‑fingerprinting tools, script blockers) guards against cross-site tracking and device fingerprinting.

Emerging DID frameworks let users authenticate or transact pseudonymously without revealing identity, shifting control from centralized authorities to user‑controlled protocols.

Yes—repeated session timings, site visit sequences, and packet sizes can reveal identity unless traffic-obfuscation tools (like mixnets or cover traffic) are used.

VPNs protect traffic across all these, but mobile carriers may still see metadata such as connection behavior. Mixnets or rotating exit nodes help reduce persistent metadata profiling.

Projects with open-source clients, third-party audits, and verifiable reputational systems give users verifiable trust—not just policy promises.

About the authors

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Casey Ford, PhD

Communications Lead
Casey is the Head of Communications, lead writer, and editorial reviewer at Nym. He holds a PhD in Philosophy and researches the intersection of decentralized technologies and social life.
Ania-Piotrowska.jpg

Ania M. Piotrowska, PhD

Technical reviewer
Ania is Nym's Chief Scientific Officer. She focuses on security, distributed systems, and anonymous communication, including onion routing and mix networks.

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