Adjusting privacy settings gives you an illusion of control while companies collect the data anyway through other means; refusing to provide information in the first place cuts off the source entirely and requires less ongoing maintenance. The smarter strategy often isn't playing the privacy-settings game better—it's not playing at all by giving less to begin with.
The safest data is data that doesn't exist. Data minimization is the strategy of deliberately deleting or never collecting unnecessary personal information. It's radically different from how most of us think about digital life—we tend to accumulate and keep everything "just in case."
But here's the reality: every piece of data you keep is a potential liability. If a company storing your data gets breached, that information can be used against you. If you die, it might be inherited by people you wouldn't want accessing it. If services shut down, your data might be sold off or abandoned in databases.
AI-assisted data minimization helps you identify information you should delete:
The AI helps by analyzing your accounts and surfacing candidates for deletion: "You haven't used this account in 3 years," "This app has access to your location but never needs it," "You have 47 Google Drive documents from your old job."
Data minimization is about cost-benefit analysis. What's the benefit of keeping that old email account you haven't checked in five years? Probably zero. What's the risk? If it gets breached, criminals have your name, email, and possibly old password hints. The risk exceeds the benefit—delete it.
This applies to information within accounts too. Your streaming service doesn't need your real home address; it needs a billing address. Your social media profile doesn't need your birth year; just the fact you're an adult. Every piece of information you don't provide is information that can't leak.
There's a real cost to data minimization: convenience. If you delete your entire purchase history from an e-commerce site, you lose easy reordering. If you stop backing up old photos, you lose access to memories. If you delete your old contacts, you lose connection history.
The strategy isn't to delete everything—it's to deliberately decide: Is this convenience worth the privacy risk of keeping this data? For most people, the answer is no most of the time.
AI can help by automating deletion: automatically delete emails after one year (unless you manually keep them), automatically disable old app permissions, automatically clean up cloud storage. These rules are more consistent than relying on manual cleanup.
Try this: Go to your phone's app permissions. Check which apps have access to your contacts, photos, location, or microphone. How many actually need this access? Your flashlight app doesn't need to know your location. Your calculator app doesn't need your contacts. Revoke unnecessary permissions. This is data minimization in action.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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