Today, I closed my Notion account. After 5 years of daily use, I've decided to prioritise privacy.
I've switched to Joplin - a lean and solid open-source note-taking app based in Europe, that stores data locally, and puts privacy front and centre. It’s much simpler but as the US government expand its reach, with the help of Big Tech, it's becoming harder to ignore a troubling reality: the tools we rely on may no longer be working in our best interest.
In today's digital world, privacy is becoming a rare commodity. Many people are starting to realise that the convenience of popular US-based apps comes at a cost - our personal data. And when you learn that even American scientists resort to burner phones at conferences, you begin to realise: privacy isn’t a fringe concern — it’s a frontline issue.
Over the past few years, I’ve been gradually switching to privacy-focused European services—for email, search, browsing, and more. I deleted Facebook and Instagram back in 2016, I exchanged Twitter for Mastodon, and have continued making changes ever since. But now the urgency feels greater. In the coming months, I plan to move everything—yes, even this Substack.
I understand this might disappoint some of you. But I believe it’s a necessary step.
Choosing privacy-first tools isn’t just about safeguarding data. It’s a quiet act of resistance. A statement that convenience isn’t worth everything. That we still can choose what kind of internet we want to be part of.
Because privacy matters. And when privacy becomes the exception, it’s up to us to make it the rule again.
I think this is very smart. I’m so tired of people telling me they have nothing to hide - so who cares. Well you are selling you - that’s the first problem and the second is you have nothing to hide until someone decides that something about you is wrong. Then you can’t escape and it’s too late for privacy