0 reviews
Chapters
6
Language
English
Genre
Published
July 15, 2025
Welcome to the digital age, where clicking the wrong link can ruin your week and your data is apparently more valuable than your firstborn. Feeling overwhelmed by firewalls, phishing, and the sheer audacity of online scams? You're not alone, you just haven't read this book yet. 'So You Think You're Safe?' cuts through the tech jargon and condescending cybersecurity experts (mostly) to give you the lowdown on protecting yourself in a world that seems determined to exploit your every digital misstep. Learn why that urgent email from your 'bank' is probably a lie, how to stop your webcam from watching you eat pizza, and why your smart fridge might be plotting against you. We'll cover the basics of online privacy, recognizing threats, and implementing simple steps that might just save you from becoming the next headline. Forget everything you thought you knew about cybersecurity, because it's probably wrong anyway. This book is your slightly sarcastic, no-nonsense guide to surviving the internet without becoming a cautionary tale. We'll tackle passwords that aren't terrible, two-factor authentication that isn't a complete pain, and the dark arts of social engineering that make even the smartest humans look like easy targets. Consider this your mandatory survival manual for living online. Read it, or don't. Just don't come crying to us when your identity is stolen and your social media is posting unsolicited pictures of your questionable life choices.
Gohar Younas Malik, a seasoned backend developer who spends his days wrestling with Python, Django, and the alphabet soup of tech (Redis, Docker, gRPC, GraphQL, AWS... you get the picture). With over six years of experience building systems that are hopefully more secure than your average password, he figured it was time to explain why your cat's name followed by '123' isn't cutting it. When not coding, Gohar enjoys cricket and proving he knows more about politics than you do. He's currently open to opportunities, presumably to escape the existential dread of digital insecurity.
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