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Cryptocurrency without privacy is pointless. If your coins arenât fungible, you lose much of the benefits of using cryptocurrency in the first place. Privacy isnât just won and lost onchain though. In fact, much of the privacy gains to be made when it comes to sending, spending and trading crypto occur offchain, as you go about your business on the web.
Also read: Wasabiâs Privacy-Focused BTC Wallet Aims to Make Bitcoin Fungible Again
The Never-Ending Quest for Privacy
Privacy is like fitness: a way of life rather than a task that can be ticked off. Just as it takes time, perseverance and focus on different muscle groups to build a better body in the gym, strengthening your privacy calls for undertaking regular exercises to stem the flow of doxable information. Every time you perform an action online, youâre hemorrhaging a trove of data. This can be particularly damaging for cryptocurrency users, whose onchain actions will be recorded indefinitely.
When paired with offchain data points such as IP, email address, and cell number, itâs possible for an adversary to build a complete picture of their target. Given the ever-increasing capabilities of three-letter agencies, itâs safe to assume that in the near future, the state will be able to construct a highly detailed picture of the activities of todayâs cryptocurrency users.
tl;dr: privacy matters. Here are five ways to up yours.
Use a VPN
Thereâs an assumption that using a VPN requires a degree of technical knowledge, and is for privacy zealots only. In fact, the majority of VPNs are foolproof and can be up and silently running in a couple of clicks â no manual port reconfiguration necessary. Opera even offers a VPN now in its desktop and Android browsers. âEnhanced online privacy is a right for everyone,â claim Opera. Theyâre right. A VPN will provide an added layer of privacy when logging into exchanges as well as masking the IP address associated with Bitcoin transaction relays.
Separate Your Regular Email From Your Crypto Email
Creating a separate email account for every cryptocurrency service you need to log into is impractical. You can, though, segment all of your crypto-related emails into a single account. This will yield twin benefits: if your main account is compromised, the hacker will have no information on or access to your crypto activities. Secondly, if you choose a fully encrypted email account such as Tutanota, prying eyes at border control and other government agencies will have no insight into your penchant for trading obscure shitcoins.
Stop Reusing Addresses
More than half of all bitcoin transactions involve addresses that have previously been used. Creating a new bitcoin address is free, instant, and provides an immediate privacy boost. If the wallet or platform youâre using doesnât allow you to create a new address at will, stop using it. Thereâs a wealth of competing services out there, and switching to a more privacy-minded alternative can be done in a matter of minutes. Unless youâre transacting solely in privacy coins like monero, or are using an account-based, rather than UTXO-based, system like ethereum, you should aim for a fresh address every time.
Keep Your Keys and Codes Offline
Where do you store the backup 2FA codes for your trading accounts and the private keys to your crypto wallets? Are they written down, split into parts and stashed offline in a series of very safe places? Or are they hidden in plaintext in a folder on your laptop marked âanimeâ? Youâd be surprised how many people go with the latter. Even if youâve encrypted the folder containing your keys and codes, itâs dangerous to assume it canât be cracked by a determined attacker since, statistically speaking, you almost certainly recycle passwords â you and 10 million others.
Keeping your private keys offline will protect you in the event of your computer being physically or digitally compromised. Even if you canât afford a bank vault or strongbox, separating your key into parts and storing it in multiple locations â with duplicates, to ensure redundancy â will work just as well.
Always Be Shuffling
Coin mixers arenât for the ultra-paranoid and the ultra-shady: theyâre for everyone. If more people ran their coins through tumblers before withdrawing them to hardware wallets, bitcoin would become significantly more fungible, and blockchain forensics companies would suffer a major blow. Even if you canât be motivated to mix your coins for the greater good, do it for your own. Services such as Cashshuffle for BCH make it easier than ever to obfuscate the origin of your coins, while Coinjoin, incorporated into pro-privacy wallets like Wasabi, do the same for BTC.
Thereâs something extremely comfortable about having a stash of cryptocurrency that canât be linked to your identity safely stored in a hardware wallet thatâs been backed up. Itâs the digital equivalent of having a backyard bunker filled with canned goods and ammo in readiness for the apocalypse. Treat yourself to a privacy makeover and see how good it feels.
What other privacy tips do you recommend? Let us know in the comments section below.
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