🔒 Privacy Policy

Last updated: January 2025. SecurityAnalysts.org is a free community service. We take your privacy seriously — especially on a security site.

What we collect

If you accept cookies, we use Google Analytics to collect anonymous usage data (pages visited, time on site, country). IP addresses are anonymised. We collect no names, emails, or personal details from analytics.

If you submit the contact form or a site suggestion, we receive the information you type. This is stored securely via Formspree and used only to respond to you.

What we never do

Cookies

We use one category of cookies: analytics cookies (Google Analytics), only if you consent. These are used to understand how many people visit and which guides are most helpful. You can withdraw consent at any time by clicking "Decline" below.

We also use a sessionStorage item (not a cookie) to remember language preferences and consent state within your visit.

Advertising

This site displays adverts served by Google AdSense. Google may use cookies to serve ads based on your prior visits to this and other websites. You can opt out via Google's Ad Settings.

Your rights (GDPR)

If you are in the EU/EEA, you have the right to access, correct, or delete any personal data we hold about you. Contact us at privacy@securityanalysts.org for any data requests.

Contact

Questions about this policy: privacy@securityanalysts.org

Password Manager Guide

If you only change one habit this year, stop reusing passwords. A password manager makes that realistic.

Advertisement

The easiest way to stop reusing passwords

A password manager stores strong unique passwords for you. You remember one master password, then it fills the rest safely.

Good free options

  • Bitwarden: strong free plan, works everywhere.
  • iCloud Keychain: excellent if you mostly use Apple devices.
  • Google Password Manager: simple if you use Chrome and Android.
  • Microsoft Authenticator: useful if you live in Microsoft/Edge.

Paid options worth knowing

1Password is polished and family-friendly. Bitwarden paid is inexpensive and adds extras. Paid is optional: using any good manager is already a huge improvement over password reuse.

Choose one manager and stick with it.
Create a long master password or passphrase.
Turn on MFA for the password manager itself.
Replace reused passwords one account at a time.

What not to do

Do not store passwords in notes

Notes apps are easy to search and easy to expose if your phone or cloud account is compromised.

Do not use one password everywhere

One leaked password can become a key to your email, banking, shopping, and social accounts.

Advertisement