Cleaning Up Your Digital Trail: A Step-by-Step Checklist
https://untraceabledigitaldissident.com/cleaning-up-your-digital-trail-a-step-by-step-checklist/
Delete. Unlink. Obscure. Then keep it that way.
You’ve been online for years. Signed up for stuff you don’t use. Shared more than you meant to. Clicked “Accept All” without reading a word. It happens.
But if you’re ready to clean up your digital trail, start here. No fluff. Just steps.
1. Audit Your Accounts
You can’t delete what you don’t remember exists.
Search your email for “Welcome to,” “Verify your email,” and “Account created”
Go through your spam folder and use the “Unsubscribe” button at the top right.
Use https://justdeleteme.xyz to find deletion links
Check password managers for old logins
Make a list. You’ll need it.
2. Delete What You Don’t Use
Start killing accounts you no longer need.
Prioritize anything tied to your real name
Delete social media first (or strip the info if deletion isn’t possible)
Remove backup emails or phone numbers
If they make you jump through hoops, jump. It’s worth it.
3. Strip Personal Data. Still need to keep an account? Gut the profile.
Remove your name, photo, bio, and location
Use alias emails (SimpleLogin, AnonAddy, etc.)
Delete old posts, comments, and uploads that give away too much personal information.
Leave as little behind as possible. Think ghost town, not guestbook.
4. Unlink Third-Party Logins
Logged in with Google, Facebook, or Apple? Unlink it.
Check the “Apps with access” section on each platform
Re-register with an email + password combo using an alias
Revoke OAuth permissions you’re no longer using
Third-party logins are lazy identity leaks.
5. Clean Up Search Engine Results
Google knows more about you than your family.
Google your name, emails, usernames
Use Google’s Remove Outdated Content tool for old cache
Contact sites directly to request removals if necessary
You can’t erase everything. But you can bury a lot of it.
6. Lock Down Your Browser. Your browser is a leaky faucet.
Use a hardened Firefox, Brave, or LibreWolf
Set it to clear cookies, history, and site data on exit
Use uBlock Origin and Privacy Badger
Disable third-party cookies and browser telemetry
No point cleaning your trail if you’re still leaving fresh ones every day.
7. Stop Using Real Info Moving Forward
Your future trail should be smaller than your old one.
Use aliases, not your real name
Use masked emails and phone numbers
Don’t reuse usernames
Compartmentalize identities (personal, financial, anonymous, etc.)
The best way to manage your digital footprint? Don’t leave one in the first place.
Final Thought
You won’t get it perfect. That’s fine. This isn’t about being always untraceable. It’s about reducing exposure, unlinking your past, and moving forward with better habits.
Clean up. Lock down. Stay quiet
#UNTRACEABLE #PRIVACY