Privacy is for good guys. It's for moms and bike messengers and foodies.
Privacy is for business meetings and voting booths. It's why we have shower curtains.
It's why we have that little padlock icon in our browser bar.
Privacy protects you from discrimination and from identity theft, and it keeps your food-delivery history under wraps. It can also shield you from those creepy somebody-has-definitely-been-listening-to-my-thoughts ads on social media apps.
Privacy isn't about shutting out everyone and everything. Instead, privacy gives you
the power to choose what and with whom you'll share. It provides safety, control and
the right to grant access.
Privacy gives you the ability to express yourself, to be creative, to spend your time and
your money in whatever manner you like, without the scrutiny of others. It protects our
intimate moments, our most embarrassing ambitions, our radical ideas and the ability
to be our true selves.
Privacy is freedom, consent, dignity and security.
Privacy is normal.