>>16712268 (OP)LISTEN UP, RECRUIT. YOU WANT TO STAY UNDOXXED? THEN TIGHTEN UP YOUR DIGITAL DISCIPLINE. YOUR BIGGEST THREAT IS NOT SOME MASTER HACKER IN A DARK ROOM — IT’S YOU LEAKING YOUR OWN INFORMATION. MOVE SMART.
1. STOP HANDING OUT INTEL
Your personal information is ammunition. Every username, photo, birthday, school, workplace, location tag, and “fun fact” is a breadcrumb.
DO NOT use your real name as your username.
DO NOT post your city, school, workplace, schedule, or daily routine.
DO NOT say “I live 10 minutes from ___” or show landmarks outside your window.
DO NOT upload pictures with:
street signs
license plates
mail
receipts
school logos
house numbers
THE INTERNET DOES NOT NEED TO KNOW WHERE YOU ARE. KEEP YOUR POSITION CLASSIFIED.
2. LOCK DOWN YOUR ACCOUNTS
Your accounts are your fortress. Right now, your fortress probably has the door wide open.
REPORT FOR DUTY:
✅ Use unique passwords for every account.
✅ Use a password manager.
✅ Turn on 2-factor authentication. Use an authenticator app if possible.
✅ Remove old connected apps.
✅ Check privacy settings.
Your password should not be:
your name
your birthday
your pet’s name
“123456”
“password”
something you typed in a Discord server three years ago
ONE COMPROMISED PASSWORD CAN START A CASCADE. DO NOT GIVE THE ENEMY A MAP.
3. SEPARATE YOUR IDENTITIES
You need different uniforms for different missions.
Create separation:
Personal identity:
family
school/work
banking
real-life contacts
Online identity:
gaming
forums
communities
Do not connect them.
Same username everywhere?
THAT IS A TRACKING BEACON.
Same profile picture everywhere?
THAT IS A FINGERPRINT.
4. DISCORD DISCIPLINE
Discord is where many people get exposed because they overshare.
NEVER:
show your IP address
click random files
run “verification” programs
download “mods” from strangers
join suspicious servers with your main account
reveal your timezone + schedule + location combo
If someone says:
"I know your IP"
Your response:
"An IP address is not my home address. Nice try."
Then leave. Do not argue. Do not give them more information.
5. WATCH WHAT YOU CLICK
The enemy does not always kick down the door.
Sometimes they leave a cookie on the floor.
Avoid:
fake Nitro links
fake giveaways
“free skins”
random EXE files
suspicious browser extensions
unknown VPNs/proxies
“verification” bots
If someone sends you a file:
ASSUME IT IS HOSTILE UNTIL PROVEN OTHERWISE.
6. PREPARE FOR A RAID
If someone starts threatening you:
DO NOT:
panic
threaten them back
reveal information trying to prove yourself
give them attention
DO:
screenshot everything
save usernames/IDs
report accounts
block them
secure your accounts
EMOTIONAL REACTIONS ARE INTELLIGENCE LEAKS. STAY CALM.
7. CLEAN YOUR DIGITAL FOOTPRINT
Search yourself.
Look up:
your usernames
old accounts
old posts
leaked emails
Delete abandoned accounts.
Remove:
old bios
personal photos
linked profiles
The internet remembers. Make it forget.
8. REAL SECURITY CHECKLIST
Before you sleep tonight:
☐ 2FA enabled
☐ Unique passwords
☐ Private social accounts
☐ Old accounts deleted
☐ No public address information
☐ No reused usernames everywhere
☐ No suspicious apps installed
☐ Recovery email secured
FINAL ORDER, RECRUIT:
THE SAFEST PERSON ONLINE IS NOT THE PERSON WHO HIDES PERFECTLY. IT IS THE PERSON WHO GIVES ATTACKERS NOTHING USEFUL TO FIND.
MOVE QUIET. SHARE LESS. VERIFY EVERYTHING.
YOUR INFORMATION IS YOUR EQUIPMENT. GUARD IT LIKE YOUR LIFE DEPENDS ON IT.