7 Simple Ways to Make Your Android Phone More Secure

Demiscottscott
3 min readDec 9, 2020

It doesn’t have to be this way, though. Navigate to settings and search for notifications, and from this page turn off the option for “sensitive notifications.” This means the content of your messages won’t pop up in the notification banner when the phone is locked.

There’s been a troubling rise in stalkerware in 2020. On phones, stalkerware manifests itself as apps running in the background that can record and track everything a person does. It’s increasingly an issue in domestic abuse cases, and the technology can appear invisible unless you go specifically looking for it.

If someone has installed stalkerware on your device, there are a few telltale signs it may be there. A phone may run hot and see its battery levels drop quickly. Cybersecurity companies have been increasingly detecting stalkerware code through their antivirus tools-both Kaspersky Antivirus and Avast’s Antivirus can check your phone for malicious apps. Refuge’s National Domestic Abuse hotline can also help people who are experiencing tech-based domestic abuse.

Virtual private networks (VPNs) aren’t a failsafe for protecting your privacy, but they can help. The software creates an encrypted connection from your device to a remote server and passes internet traffic through this. It stops your internet service provider from fully knowing and storing your browsing history. Journalists, activists, and people looking to avoid state censorship are some of the most frequent users of VPNs.

But which VPN should you pick? There are a lot of options out there, and they all have different pricing arrangements. It’s best to choose a paid VPN, as these are less likely to have questionable data practices; ones that offer family or multiple-device plans can cover whole households easily. We like Windscribe and ExpressVPN. They’re both quick and have proven they don’t store logs of your browsing activity, unlike some VPNs.

If you’ve had your Android phone for a while, you probably haven’t thought twice about the apps you use for search, voice assistants, phone, and SMS. This summer Google launched a choice screen on new Android phones-after it was fined £3.8 billion by the European Competition Commission-that allows people to pick their search engine during the initial setup. This lets you pick a search engine that isn’t Google-yes, they exist!

Within Android’s settings options, look for “default apps” in “apps & notifications,” and you can pick the apps you use most frequently. It goes beyond search: You can change browsers, digital assistants, home app, phone app, and SMS app. Some of our favorite privacy-friendly alternatives include Firefox (for a browser), DuckDuckGo (browser and search), and Signal (SMS).

While your phone’s passcode protects your files and data from being accessed by someone trying to access your phone, it doesn’t do anything to secure the data stored on your phone at a technical level. For this, you need to encrypt your device’s disk. Turning on encryption means that the files can’t be accessed by anyone trying to extract them from your device unless they have the passcode. “Encryption ensures that even if an unauthorized party tries to access the data, they won’t be able to read it,” Google says.

You can encrypt your phone through the settings app-it’s easily found by searching for “security” or “encrypt.” To do this you’ll have to enter, or create, your phone’s PIN and make sure it is on charge. Encrypting a full device can take a little bit of time, so it’s probably best to do this during some downtime. Google has made it mandatory that Android devices can be encrypted since 2015, and it is increasing its efforts to make it less resource-intensive on low-end devices.

This story originally appeared on WIRED UK.

Originally published at https://www.wired.com.

--

--

Demiscottscott
0 Followers

In business since 2014, i am a cohesive team of developers, technicians, marketing specialists and design professionals.