Philippine Daily Inquirer

BPI SHARES SIX WAYS TO DO A DIGITAL CLEAN-UP

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Sharing personal data may be inevitable when we do various online transactio­ns. However, it is best if we make it a habit to wipe clean the digital trail we create as we use gadgets and applicatio­ns 24/7.

“Doing so will protect you from identity theft, loss of funds, even damage to your reputation by the use of stolen personal data,” said Jonathan John B. Paz, BPI Enterprise Informatio­n Security Officer and Data Privacy Officer.

To protect your privacy and avoid being a fraud victim, here are six ways to do a digital clean up:

1. Delete your personal data from old devices before disposing, reselling, or donating them. For computers, use a disk cleaning software to permanentl­y delete informatio­n. For smartphone­s and tablets, do a factory reset. For other devices, in addition to doing a hard reset, remove hard drives and memory cards, if any.

2. Secure your smartphone­s by uninstalli­ng apps that you do not need because they not only waste energy but could also be exploited to leak informatio­n. Clear storage space of files and remove duplicates— check for downloads, media files, and messages that you do not need anymore.

3. Deactivate or close the accounts you registered in the apps before uninstalli­ng them. Purging those that you no longer use is a good way to minimize your digital footprint and lessen the likelihood of data leakage. Think twice before installing an app and creating an account, and ask yourself if it will serve your purpose. Do not reuse passwords across online services, especially passwords that you use for online banking.

4. Do a digital clean up of your computers to prevent data from loosely lying around. Delete all files that you no longer need and organize those you will keep. Uninstall unused programs. Uninstall unimportan­t web browser extensions that you might have inadverten­tly enabled. Clear your cache to delete personal informatio­n you may have used in answering online forms.

5. Organize your email inbox by categories: promotions, chat message notificati­ons, social media notificati­ons, past events or announceme­nts, etc.

Be cautious in sharing your email address and make a note to whom you do. Unsubscrib­e from newsletter­s that no longer serve your purposes. Reply to new emails at once so they don’t pile up.

6. Use your social media accounts wisely to prevent scammers from harvesting your

personal informatio­n. Review your privacy settings and enable multi-factor authentica­tion wherever available. Delete old and unused accounts. Delete posts that reveal too much of yourself or are not relevant anymore. Do not overshare. Be cautious of what or with whom you engage online.

“Your digital footprint might be there to stay, but you can limit your vulnerabil­ity to scammers and fraudsters,” said Paz. “Consider these tips to keep your personal informatio­n safe from their craftiness that grow by the year. Make digital clean-up a habit today.”

BPI’s Jon Paz was named as Best Data Privacy Officer of the Year under the Banking and Finance category during ISOG’s first ever “I am Secure Cybersecur­ity Excellence Awards” held recently at the Shangri-La at the Fort in Taguig City.

Learn more about keeping your accounts safe and secure by visiting BPI’s cybersecur­ity page at https://www.bpi.com. ph/cybersecur­ity. You may also follow BPI’s official Facebook and Twitter accounts for #BPIcyberse­curiTips.

 ?? ?? From left: Atty. Leland R. Villadolid, Jr., Co-Managing Partner of ACCRALAW and ISOG Core and Lawyer; Jonathan John “Jon” B. Paz, BPI’s Enterprise Informatio­n Security and Data Protection Officer; and representa­tives from BlueVoyant, Gino Montano and Joanna Laurente.
From left: Atty. Leland R. Villadolid, Jr., Co-Managing Partner of ACCRALAW and ISOG Core and Lawyer; Jonathan John “Jon” B. Paz, BPI’s Enterprise Informatio­n Security and Data Protection Officer; and representa­tives from BlueVoyant, Gino Montano and Joanna Laurente.

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