Why Digital Self-Sovereignty Matters
Digital self-sovereignty sounds abstract. It’s often associated with ideology, decentralization, or extreme independence.Something technical. Something political. Something “not for normal...
Digital self-sovereignty sounds abstract. It’s often associated with ideology, decentralization, or extreme independence.Something technical. Something political. Something “not for normal...
For a long time, user expectations were shaped by novelty. New features mattered more than consequences.Speed mattered more than structure.Convenience...
For a long time, privacy-first software was treated as a niche. Something for activists.For security professionals.For users willing to accept...
Anonymity is often treated as a feature. Something you turn on.Something optional.Something suspicious. But anonymity works best when it isn’t...
Anonymity and secrecy are often treated as the same thing. Both hide something.Both reduce visibility.Both make people uneasy. But in...
Anonymity has a branding problem. For some, it’s synonymous with irresponsibility.For others, it’s confused with secrecy, deception, or something to...
Privacy and usability are often presented as opposites. One promises protection.The other promises ease. In product discussions, this tension usually...
Most people don’t wake up one day and decide to give up their freedom. They don’t announce it. They don’t...
Most people believe they are in control of their digital lives.They choose their apps. They adjust settings. They click “Allow”...
In conversations about technology, the word ethics usually appears somewhere near “values” or “morals”, as if it lives on a...