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Windows – What Never To Share Online

> Windows – What Never To Share Online

Be Smart – Don’t Do This

1. Financial Info

  • Sorry, you can’t just post your credit card or bank logins like they’re cat memes.
  • Stick to reputable sites with HTTPS and that cute little lock icon.
  • Don’t upload photos of your cards—this isn’t social media bragging rights.

2. Passwords & Login Credentials

  • If your password is “password123,” you deserve better.
  • Even strong passwords are worthless if you share them publicly—in comments, tweets, emails, or Insta bios.
  • Need to share? Use encrypted messaging. Otherwise, keep it zipped.

3. Home Wi‑Fi Details

  • Your network name (SSID) and Wi‑Fi password? Big red flags.
  • Sharing them is like leaving your door open at midnight.
  • Always use WPA3, or at least WPA2, and make that password ridiculously complex.

4. Work‑Related Secrets

  • Your work email, employee ID, internal systems—keep that off TikTok.
  • Business gossip and rants don’t need a public platform. Save it for therapy or your tightest circle.

5. Personal Medical Info

  • Medical history, test results, prescriptions… these are not quirky shareable content.
  • Trust doctors and close family for that kind of talk, not randos online.

6. Kids’ Pictures & Personal Data

  • Love sharing baby’s first steps? Go for it, but crop out school names, addresses, and full names.
  • And don’t post other people’s kids without permission—it’s creepy, not cute.

7. Relationship Status & Dating Life

  • “Single” or “It’s complicated”? Scammers and creeps love that info.
  • Unless your audience is your inner circle only, keep it vague.

8. Vacation Plans

  • Blast off to Bali and post every selfie? Not until after you’re home.
  • Sharing plans in advance is basically an “EMPTY HOUSE — PLEASE ROB” invite.

9. Identifiable Photo Data

  • Street signs, license plates, office name tags, calendars—crop or blur ‘em.
  • Remove EXIF metadata (location, camera details) before posting. Tools like ExifTool can help.

10. Your Mother’s Maiden Name

  • Security questions love this gem—but hackers love it more.
  • If that info’s publicly accessible, it’s not secure.

Why This Matters

  • $10 billion lost to online fraud in 2023 alone. Yeah, that’s what sloppy sharing can cost.
  • Identity theft, phishing, doxxing, burglary—these aren’t scare tactics—they’re real consequences.
  • Oversharing in public spaces equips malicious people with ammo.

Share Smarter: A Quick Guide

What to Keep PrivateHow to Share Safely (If You Must)
Credit/debit cards, bank detailsUse secure, trusted sites; post nothing public
Passwords & system credentialsOnly via encrypted chat if unavoidable
Wi‑Fi name & passwordKeep them offline—no exceptions
Work email & employer detailsKeep venting to coworkers offline
Medical records or prescriptionsShare only with doctors or trusted confidants
Personal info about childrenBlur identifiers; consent matters
Itineraries & travel datesPost after returning
Photos with hidden metadataCrop/blur images and strip EXIF data
Mother’s maiden name or SSNDon’t trust security questions blindly

Final Thoughts

Yes, posting that “OMG, I just got engaged!!!” status feels great in the moment. But remember scam artists and creeps are watching. So unless you’re aiming for fame – or identity theft – keep this stuff offline or safely stored in trusted digital vaults.