Keeping Your Computer Private

Your wife could be browsing through all the files and emails that you thought you deleted when you leave your computer unattended. If not her, then your boss or best friend could be. Where exactly do you think your files, emails, and history go when you think you delete them? They actually aren't completely deleted, normally a small backup, or footprint, is saved. These little footprints take up valuable hard drive space, bog down your computer, and slow down the boot up time; that's all just the good stuff.

By normal searching means, you would never find one of these footprints. Unfortunately there are hundreds of programs out there designed to find them and retrieve the original information. Imagine your spouse finding a flirty email written to a friend a long time ago that you thought you safely deleted. To make matters worse, you don't need any technological knowledge to use these programs and find deleted files.

Legal action can be taken if these files are in any way incriminating. Many people have gotten lawsuits and divorces from files and emails they thought they deleted months before. If they had some kind of way to protect their privacy, none of that would have been a problem. It's not uncommon for a husband to be found with incriminating evidence of him cheating on his wife through deleted emails and divorced for everything he was worth.

Internet history can save months or more of websites that you've visited. Imagine a website that you visited a half a year ago. If you don't regularly clean your internet browsing history, anyone with no technological knowledge can see what you were looking at back then. This allows for almost no privacy whatsoever.

The first step to keeping your computer more private is to understand how these footprints get on your computer, as well as how to get them off. The best way to do this is to download a new free report named Your Computer Privacy Is At Risk. This report will explain what these footprints are, what they do, where they get stored, and more. It also covers privacy controllers, or programs that keep the privacy of your computer to you.

Finding a good privacy controller is a very hard feat, many programs give free scans, the problem with these is that many use fudged numbers. That means that they will fake the number of files and emails they find to make you scared and in need of the product. You need to find a program that doesn't use fudged numbers to make sure that you are actually being secured.

Keeping people from revisiting everything you've ever done on a computer isn't hard, it just takes a little bit of time. By looking through this free report, it is almost guaranteed that you will learn at least a little about protecting your privacy. It's definitely worth twenty minutes to read.

To learn more about computer privacy, check out the free Privacy Control report. Feel free to distribute this article in any form as long as you include this resource box. You can also include your affiliate link if you sign up at Clickbank Pirate.

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