User fallingknife over at SDF recently posted the "Angry Person's Guide to Privacy"[1]. How appropriate that I logged into Walmart this morning (there was a health item that it made sense to buy and have shipped to the store there, that they didn't carry locally), and noticed that under "reorder" they had associated EVERY ITEM that I had ever purchased in the store, with my new online account (which I had only used to purchase one particular item). Illusion of privacy shattered. That's what I get for using the same payment mechanism, a non-private debit card. There goes the "Angry" bit. I loved fallingknife's advice. Some of it I already follow, some of it was already on my radar, other bits I hadn't really thought about. My phone, for example; I've gone "dumb phone" in the past, but have a smart phone currently. I could do better about just turning it off when I'm not using it. I own a Garmin Nuvi with updated maps for my area, but I don't use it because I'm lazy. You know, when it comes to it, most of my privacy issues are from laziness. I think that's by design, actually, an engineered behavior pattern. That takes at least some of the blame off me, for a while. [1] gopher://sdf.org:70/0/users/fallingknife/phlog/20190823_angry-persons-guide-to-privacy.txt