# Re-acquainting Yourself with Privacy Online by Seth Kenlon Last year, I wrote down some [tips on locking down data and protecting privacy](https://opensource.com/life/16/1/how-increase-online-privacy), discussing PGP email encryption, ownCloud, and the concept of online identity. The main issue I was trying to address in that article was active invasion of privacy; the kind of privacy you care about when you're - as the saying goes - "dancing like no one's watching". When you *know* there's something in your email that you don't necessarily want to leave out on the table for everyone who wanders by to see, or when you know that some files you're keeping contain controversial opinions or statements that you'd rather keep to yourself for now, that's when you break out ownCloud or [nextCloud](https://nextcloud.com) or use GnuPG. Let's face it, though, most people think of this kind of privacy as "good enough". After all, billions of HTTP requests and emails and instant messages and social media posts happen every hour of every day; who's got time to rummage through *your* stuff? And even if they did happen to target you, personally, what are the chances of them finding anything you'd actually care about? What we need to do is to be as subversive in our resistance to invasion of privacy as those people and companies who are inserting themselves into our personal lives. @font face Brave - trackers block