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Quick privacy upgrade: Turn your phone to safe mode

All I want for Christmas is to help keep your data safe. The bad news is there are a ton of cybercriminals out there doing their best to stop me.

Apple recently shared the results of a study from MIT on the growing threat of cyberattacks around the globe. A mindblowing 2.6 billion personal records were breached in 2021 and 2022. I’d say it’s time to act if you haven’t already.

Your phone is one gateway criminals can use to strike. Be smart and get this done now while you’re thinking about it. I’ll show you how to turn on built-in protections for your Apple or Android phone.

Apple makes it easy

End-to-end encryption has long been the default for Apple iMessage, iCloud Keychain and Health data. We like this. 

But you’re missing out if you aren’t using Apple’s Advanced Data Protection. It encrypts your messages in iCloud, iPhone iCloud backup, iCloud Drive, Notes, photos, reminders, Safari bookmarks, Siri shortcuts, voice memos and Wallet Passes.

Here are the steps to enable Apple’s ADP:

Use an Android? Try this

Apple does the best job at safeguarding data, but Android’s protections are pretty solid. 

Through Google Play Protect, all apps are analyzed before they’re available for download. It also performs daily scans to help disable malware and harmful apps on your phone. New apps that pose a security risk will not be allowed to be installed.

Android backups are uploaded to Google servers and encrypted with your Google Account password. Sometimes, your phone’s screen lock PIN, pattern or password is also used to encrypt your data.

To set up automatic backups on your Android device using Google One, follow these steps:

NOTE: Google One backups may take up to 24 hours. 

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