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How much of your life have you degoogled?

We're reaching the end of an era wherein billions of dollars of investor money was shovelled into tech startups to build large user-bases, and now those companies (now monoliths) are beginning to constrict their user-bases and squeeze for every single penny they can possibly extract. Fair or not.

Now more than ever, it's important for us to step back and reconsider whether we want to be billboards for these companies anymore.

For anyone unfamiliar, some good resources to have when starting your degoogling journey are below:

Privacy Guides - A list of privacy-respecting services you can use.

Plexus - A crowdsourced information bank of service compatibility with degoogled devices.

This random PDF - A study from 2018 detailing data that Google tracks about its' users.

93 comments
  • I deleted my Google accounts today and made a Proton email to replace my previous emails with. I’m now using Firefox and DDG, and it honestly feels much fresher now. I’m happy to finally be exploring alternatives to Google and learning about online security and integrity.

    • i can see on your profile that you're 17, you're awesome for taking these things seriously so young. it gets a chuckle sometimes when people see no google apps on my phone, or a different search engine when i look something up. if you hear any laughs, just know you're on the right side of history :p

      • These past few weeks I’ve really been getting more and more into programming and online security. I reckon I will learn a lot from this community, and Lemmy in general. The whole Reddit migration thing already taught me plenty about how a corporate app can drive away its users. It feels good to let Google go, and here is to learning more about everything federated and decentralised!

    • Deleting the old email account that fast is a bit risky. I still have my old yahoo account after switching to posteo two years ago and still sometimes get mails to it.

  • I have started to degoogle bits and pieces. I self-host the majority of the services I need and really enjoyed the journey so far since I learned so much. I am approaching the stage in my life where I have less time to spend on personal hobbies so I fear this path may not be sustainable. In my opinions here are the pros and cons.

    Pros:

    • Full control of my data
    • Pick the ideal tool from the open source community
    • Learning experience
    • Engagement with community

    Cons:

    • Technical knowledge needed to setup and maintain self-hosted tools
    • Self-hosted tools have security risks (best to put everything behind VPN)
    • Disparate tools don't connect together (requires additional automation configuration)
    • Additional costs for services including and not limited to: domain name, email, backup storage, self-host server hardware, VPN, and donations to devs
    • Higher personal downtime due to lacking features, server and service maintenance
    • Time sink to learn, research, general devops of tools, maintenance of server

    Key services to name a few:

    • File storage - Nextcloud
    • File sync - Syncthing
    • Office- Nextcloud + Collabora
    • Email - Mailfence
    • Photos - Photoprism

    So far there are more negatives than positives, but the positives still outweigh negatives. I do have to say degoogling is getting easier than before.

  • I'm using ProtonMail with my own domain, DuckDuckGo, self-hosted photo album, Firefox and PC/iOS devices. The only thing I have a Google account for is for a paid YouTube subscription, which I use in a Firefox container tab.

    I'd like to think I'm pretty degoogled, but due to network effects, I'm probably not. Everyone I send email to has a Gmail address, every web page I visit has Google Analytics (which Firefox may or may not block, I cannot be sure about that) and most people who have my phone number have it stored on their Android device. So Google gets a shit ton of data about me indirectly, regardless of whether I consent to it or not.

    • What are you using for syncing and viewing your photos? I ended up with a mailbox.org account, because I really want my contacts to be synced to the OS on my phone. So right now I just upload them to my cloud drive there, but I need to at least automate it. I might end up using the OX Drive app that mailbox.org recommends, or I might end up using syncthing to sync locally, and then push them up to the mailbox.org drive using webdav.

      I'm just using Simple Gallery on my phone for now, not sure where I'll end up on my laptop once I finish switching off the Apple ecosystem back to a Thinkpad running Linux. I've been looking at Piwigo and PhotoPrism a bit, but haven't given them a try yet. PhotoPrism has webdav support, so it's especially intriguing.

      On the other hand, I might switch to Proton Mail in 10-20 years when they implement the promised contact sync to the OS. Or even better, if Tutanota does it. But I guess if I use webdav, it leaves me pretty open to spin up a server somewhere for photos and other files. I've already been thinking about getting a Baikal server going for VJOURNAL support, to run jtxtasks, not that Baikal supports webdav...

      • I ran PhotoPrism on my home server for awhile but realized it was a bit overkill for my use case. Now I just use my NAS server's built in photo gallery app (QNAP Photo Station), in which I can create shared albums that I can expose to the internet with Caddy server acting as reverse proxy and an extra authentication layer. I have a custom domain that hosts the photo gallery so I can copy and paste a magic URL plus login credentials into a Signal chat to anyone who asks (and whom I trust).

  • pretty effectively!

    I use a Searx instance for searching (with the engine it uses set to DDG), Tutanota for email and Piped/Invidious and Libretube for videos. meanwhile on both my phone and tablet I've used ADB to purge all of Google's malware, and Play Services is outright disabled on my tablet lmao (and contrary to what one might think, the only thing it impacts is I don't get app notifications)

    and then I use Aurora Store to update Twitch and Discord, and I use alternatives from F-Droid for stuff like the calendar

  • Working on it
    Had to give them some money for a Pixel 7, at least it was half off plus a trade-in on the old phone Installed GrapheneOS a couple of days ago

  • I've degoogled my life as much as I can, but it's almost impossible to completely ditch Google Maps, YouTube, and Android. So I'm not even sure I've done anything significant, because I assume they get pretty much everything from my phone.

  • Basically outside of Youtube I don’t use any Google service. Started by migrating to Kagi search, and while it requires a subscription, its a price I am willing to pay for a search engine that actually work good.

    Everything else I use a mix of FOSS and subscription services.

  • The biggest thing I de-Googled was gmail. I had my own domain already so it wasn't tough to move (to my web hosting provider's included email service).

    I switched to Firefox+uBO from Chrome.

    They de-Googled RSS for me (now on Newsblur).

    Things I still use:

    • Drive for backups (but have a local backup in case their AI bans me)
    • YouTube Premium (I hate ads)
    • Contacts (Cardbook addon for Thunderbird works well with this)
    • Calendar (Thunderbird supports natively)
    • Keep (Shared shopping list)
    • Pixel phone (I don't really care for Apple, either)
93 comments