Privacy Guides is a socially motivated website that provides information for protecting your data security and privacy. We are a non-profit project with a mission to inform the public about the value of digital privacy, and about global government initiatives which aim to monitor your online activity. Our website is free of advertisements and not affiliated with any of the listed providers.
Staff¶
Jonah Aragon is the Project Director and staff writer at Privacy Guides. His role includes researching and writing for this website, system administration, creating Privacy Guides Online Learning course content, reviewing the products recommended here, and most other day-to-day tasks.
The Project Director is a part-time position which reports directly to the executive committee.
Executive Committee¶
The project executive committee consists of five volunteers charged with management of the MAGIC Privacy Guides Fund, making most critical project-related decisions.
- Daniel Gray
Founder
- Freddy
Founder
- Jonah Aragon
Founder, Director
- Niek de Wilde
Founder
- Olivia
Founder
Volunteer Team¶
A number of other contributors have volunteered their time to review and approve changes to this website, and keep the website up to date. Changes require 2+ approvals from team members before they can be merged. In addition to the executive committee members above, volunteers trusted to review pull requests include:
We also especially thank our dedicated moderation team on Matrix and our forum: Austin Huang, namazso, hik, riley, and Valynor.
Additionally, many other people have made contributions to the project. You can too! We're open source on GitHub, and accepting translation suggestions on Crowdin.
Our team members review all changes made to the website and direct the course of the project as a whole. They do not personally profit from any contributions made to this site. Donations to Privacy Guides are generally tax-deductible in the United States.
In The Media¶
To find [privacy-focused alternative] apps, check out sites like Good Reports and Privacy Guides, which list privacy-focused apps in a variety of categories, notably including email providers (usually on paid plans) that aren’t run by the big tech companies.
If you're looking for a new VPN, you can go to the discount code of just about any podcast. If you are looking for a good VPN, you need professional help. The same goes for email clients, browsers, operating systems and password managers. How do you know which of these is the best, most privacy-friendly option? For that there is Privacy Guides, a platform on which a number of volunteers search day in, day out for the best privacy-friendly tools to use on the internet.
— Tweakers.net [Translated from Dutch]
Also featured on: Ars Technica, Wirecutter [2], NPO Radio 1, Wired and Fast Company.
History¶
Privacy Guides was launched in September 2021 as a continuation of the defunct "PrivacyTools" open-source educational project. We recognized the importance of independent, criteria-focused product recommendations and general knowledge in the privacy space, which is why we needed to preserve the work that had been created by so many contributors since 2015 and make sure that information had a stable home on the web indefinitely.
In 2022, we completed the transition of our main website framework from Jekyll to MkDocs, using the mkdocs-material
documentation software. This change made open-source contributions to our site significantly easier for outsiders, because instead of needing to know complicated syntax to write posts effectively, contributing is now as easy as writing a standard Markdown document.
We additionally launched our new discussion forum at discuss.privacyguides.net as a community platform to share ideas and ask questions about our mission. This augments our existing community on Matrix, and replaced our previous GitHub Discussions platform, decreasing our reliance on proprietary discussion platforms.
In 2023, we launched international translations of our website in French, Hebrew, Dutch, and more languages, made possible by our excellent translation team on Crowdin. We plan to continue carrying forward our mission of outreach and education, and finding ways to more clearly highlight the dangers of a lack of privacy awareness in the modern digital age, and the prevalence and harms of security breaches across the technology industry.
Site License¶
The following is a human-readable summary of (and not a substitute for) the license.
Unless otherwise noted, the original content on this website is made available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International Public License. This means that you are free to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format for any purpose, even commercially; as long as you give appropriate credit to Privacy Guides (www.privacyguides.org)
and share your work under the same license.
You may comply with these terms in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests Privacy Guides endorses you or your use.