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Stop Oversharing: How to Make Your Social Profiles Private

Your public posts online can make you an easy target for criminals of all kinds. We tell you how to lock down your social media accounts—and why you should.

(RaShawn Dixon; Shutterstock)

In the current social media landscape, it’s easy to overshare. More people than ever can find intimate details about your life by analyzing the information you choose to broadcast online.

Even more worrying are the security concerns that come from posting your life's details online. Your public posts can make you easy targets for advertisers, scammers, spammers, stalkers, and every other undesirable person online. Read on to find out why you should make your public social profiles private and how you can lock them down today.


How to Lock Down Your Online Presence

Before I get to why it's so important to make your accounts private, let's start with a few steps you can take today to reduce your social media footprint. Social platforms all have different locations for their menu settings, so I'm offering general guidelines for privacy protection:


Why You Should Lock Down Your Social Media Accounts

As a teenager, I loved social media. Armed with a Myspace page, a Friendster account, and an AIM friends list a mile long, I constantly posted vague, navel-gazing song lyrics from the likes of Modest Mouse and Interpol. Did I overshare? Absolutely. In those heady days of assumed internet anonymity, I never considered who read my (very dull) suburban teenage thoughts until a teacher referenced one of my posts during class.

I was mortified. Aside from being concerned as to why my teacher looked up his students on Myspace in his spare time, I saw the event as an invasion of my privacy. I realized that people I didn’t know or trust presumed to know "the real Kim" from reading my silly joke posts and sad song lyrics. Social media ultimately lost its appeal for me, and I locked down or deleted all my accounts. It was a tough lesson, but I'm glad I learned it early in my life online via a relatively low-stakes incident.

(Credit: grinvalds/Getty Images)

To an online scammer, a public social media feed is akin to a well-stocked supermarket of personal data. Criminals can pick through intimate details of your life and then load up their carts with sensitive information about you, no matter how trivial. Scammers then use that information to impersonate you for financial gain, send you messages containing phishing links, or target you with romance scams.


4 Questions to Ask Before Posting on Social Media

Perhaps a public social media profile is necessary for your career, as it is for mine. Maybe you want to find some new friends or get information about a new hobby. You can still create public posts about those things without sacrificing a lot of personal data. Just avoid sharing information and media related to your daily routine, family, medical details, and other private details.

But what if you're having a hard time and you just want to vent? Before you post a love life lament or voice your workplace grievances using a public social media account, I recommend asking yourself the following questions:

1. Who Needs to Know This?

Identify your desired target audience before you hit "send." If you are posting just for yourself, it's wise to conduct an internal check and determine why you need to post this private thought, photo, or other media in a public forum.

2. Do I Want Strangers to See This?

You may think you're screaming into a void, but social platforms are not a black hole for thoughts and ideas. A lack of engagement in the form of likes or shares on your posts doesn't mean other people aren't seeing them. Not only are your fellow humans seeing what you post online, but they also may be forming an image of you that you don't intend to project. There's also the worry that criminals may scan your posts for information about your life so they can conduct social engineering schemes to bilk you out of your hard-earned money.

3. Do I Want This to Follow Me Forever?

Remember that the internet never forgets. If you write words, broadcast media, or post photos online, assume that all of that content is going to stick around for a long time.

4. What Do I Want to Happen After I Post This?

Consider what you have to gain from posting personal information or photos of yourself in a public setting, and also consider what you have to lose, which is anonymity, privacy, and security.


Keep It to the Group Chat (or Yourself!)

If you're prone to oversharing on social media platforms, don't despair! The good news is that chatting and sharing media with groups of family and friends on secure messaging platforms is a much safer way to communicate. Signal, in particular, added new options for stories and feed activities that allow you to interact easily with all of your friends on the app. As a bonus, you'll be sharing your posts with people who are most likely to engage with what you post.

Another option is to start writing your thoughts down in a private diary or journal. I prefer to use a cheap but sturdy notebook and a pen for journaling, but there are plenty of digital journaling apps out there too. I also like to use the Notes app on iOS for dashing off quick thoughts and storing assorted memes.

Don't give up your privacy and safety for a few likes and the off-chance of temporary fame. Keep your personal information private. To learn how to further reduce your online presence, check out PCMag's guide to staying anonymous online.

About Kim Key