Over the weekend, I was getting a couple of people I was chatting with up to speed on Tails, which is an operating system that’s built from the ground up with a focus on security and anonymity.
Tails is recommended by Edward Snowden, computer intelligence consultant and whistleblower, and it sends all your internet traffic over the Tor network, which is an encrypted protocol for anonymous communication. When you close the Tails operating system, all traces of everything you did evaporate.
Also: Android’s new ‘unknown tracker alerts’ can help warn users of rogue Apple AirTags
Tails also includes tools such as a password manager, a Bitcoin wallet, the LibreOffice suite, and much more. All these resources are available for free. And Tails is very cool — if you can get it to work.
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Normally, Tails is installed on a USB flash drive that you can plug into a computer running Windows, Linux, or Intel-based MacOS (sorry, but you can’t use any of the new Macs running the M1/M2 Apple Silicon processors). You can boot up Tails off the flash drive and enter a secure workspace.
Also: This is the USB flash drive James Bond would use
Any reasonably decent USB flash drive will work. I use the SanDisk Ultra Dual Drive flash drives–> because they have USB-A and USB-C connectors, making them perfect for all systems.