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This is precisely one of the things that scare me, and that I commented about on another post yesterday.

The problem is that there is no retroactive solution for this, which means a lot of people will have problems.

Digital hygiene is quickly becoming something we have to plan to teach children sooner than later.

teach children sooner than later.

I've been thinking a lot about this. I don't want to make my children paranoid, but I do want to help them avoid some decisions that have very lasting consequences.

For ourselves, I often wonder if it doesn't make sense to move with some frequency.

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I move frequently, it helps.

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For ourselves, I often wonder if it doesn't make sense to move with some frequency.

Been thinking this also. Sad but maybe a necessity especially for us bitcoiners.

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Always order a hardware wallet to a PO box or use a mail forwarding company if possible

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I think constantly how to make them "the correct amount of paranoid". I made a lot of mistakes, and I will try to at least use them as a kind of real-life example of what can go wrong (assuming I'll be able to have an honest an reasonable relationship with them).

I also think that introduce them to the rudiments of programming and informatics could be beneficial because they could endogenously develop a curiosity about the issues and weaknesses of the current digital world we are immersed in.

On the other hand, I believe the most difficult obstacle will be peer pressure. I genuinely do not know what I would do if my kids would be in a position of being excluded because they don't have phones/social media. I know what I should do ideally, but the details and potential consequences I can not reasonably predict are too many.

Concerning moving, I get that it would help if an address is leaked, but it's obviously a non-solution to (what I believe is) the vast majority of people suffering from these data breaches since work/life flexibility is kind of a "luxury".

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