Wednesday, October 8, 2025

Polaris of Enlightenment

Without consent

How parents unknowingly build surveillance files on their children.

Published 3 May 2025
– By Naomi Brockwell
4 minute read

Your child’s first digital footprint isn’t made by them—it’s made by you

What does the future look like for your child?

Before they can even talk, many kids already have a bigger digital footprint than their parents did at 25.

Every ultrasound shared on Facebook.
Every birthday party uploaded to Instagram.
Every proud tweet about a funny thing they said.

Each post seems harmless—until you zoom out and realize you’re building a permanent, searchable, biometric dossier on your child, curated by you.

This isn’t fearmongering. It’s the reality of a world where data is forever.
And it’s not just your friends and family who are watching.

Your kid is being profiled before they hit puberty

Here’s the uncomfortable truth:

When you upload baby photos, you’re training facial recognition databases on their face—at every age and stage.

When you post about their interests, health conditions, or behavior, you’re populating detailed profiles that can predict who they might become.

These profiles don’t just sit idle.
They’re analyzed, bought, and sold.

By the time your child applies for a job or stands up for something they believe in, they may already be carrying a hidden score assigned by an algorithm—built on data you posted.

When their childhood data comes back to haunt them

Imagine your child years from now, applying for a travel visa, a job, or just trying to board a flight.

A background check pulls information from facial recognition databases and AI-generated behavior profiles—flagging them for additional scrutiny based on “historic online associations”.

They’re pulled aside. Interrogated. Denied entry. Or worse, flagged permanently.

Imagine a future law that flags people based on past “digital risk indicators”—and your child’s online record becomes a barrier to accessing housing, education, or financial services.

Insurance companies can use their profile to label them a risky customer.

Recruiters might quietly filter them out based on years-old digital behavior.

Not because they did something wrong—but because of something you once shared.

Data doesn’t disappear.
Governments change. Laws evolve.
But surveillance infrastructure rarely gets rolled back.

And once your child’s data is out there, it’s out there forever.
Feeding systems you’ll never see.
Controlled by entities you’ll never meet.

For purposes you’ll never fully understand.

The rise of biometric surveillance—and why it targets kids first

Take Discord’s new AI selfie-based age verification. To prove they’re 13+, children are encouraged to submit selfies—feeding sensitive biometric data into AI systems.

You can change your password. You can’t change your face.

And yet, we’re normalizing the idea that kids should hand over their most immutable identifiers just to participate online.

Some schools already collect facial scans for attendance. Some toys use voice assistants that record everything your child says.

Some apps marketed as “parental control” tools grant third-party employees backend access to your child’s texts, locations—even live audio.

Ask yourself: Do you trust every single person at that company with your child’s digital life?

“I know you love me, and would never do anything to harm me…”

In the short film Without Consent, by Deutsche Telekom, a future version of a young girl named Ella speaks directly to her parents. She pleads with them to protect her digital privacy before it’s too late.

She imagines a future where:

  • Her identity is stolen.
  • Her voice is cloned to scam her mom into sending money.
  • Her old family photo is turned into a meme, making her a target of school-wide bullying.
  • Her photos appear on exploitation sites—without her knowledge or consent.

It’s haunting because it’s plausible.

This is the world we’ve built.
And your child’s data trail—your posts—is the foundation.

The most powerful privacy lesson you can teach? How you live online.

Children learn how to navigate the digital world by watching you.

What are you teaching them if you trade their privacy for likes?

The best gift you can give them isn’t a new device—it’s the mindset and tools to protect themselves in a world that profits from their exposure.

Even “kid-safe” tech often betrays that trust.

Baby monitors have leaked footage.

Tracking apps have glitched and exposed locations of random children (yes, really).

Schools collect and store sensitive information with barely any safeguards—and breaches happen all the time.

How to protect your child’s digital future

Stop oversharing
Avoid posting photos, birthdays, locations, or anecdotes about your child online—especially on platforms that monetize engagement.

Ditch spyware apps
Instead of surveillance, foster open dialogue. If monitoring is necessary, choose open-source, self-hosted tools where you control the data—not some faceless company.

Teach consent early
Help your child understand that their body, thoughts, and information are theirs to control. Make digital consent a family value.

Opt out of biometric collection
Say no to tools that demand selfies, facial scans, or fingerprints. Fight back against the normalization of biometric surveillance for kids.

Use aliases and VoIP numbers
When creating accounts for your child, use email aliases and VoIP numbers to avoid linking their real identity across platforms.

Push schools and apps for better policies
Ask your child’s school: What data do they collect? Who has access? Is it encrypted?
Push back on apps that demand unnecessary permissions. Ask hard questions.

This isn’t paranoia—it’s parenting in the digital age

This is about protecting your child’s right to grow up without being boxed in by their digital past.

About giving them the freedom to explore ideas, try on identities, and make mistakes—without it becoming a permanent record.

Privacy is protection.
It’s dignity.
It’s autonomy.

And it’s your job to help your child keep it.
Let’s give the next generation a chance to write their own story.

 

Yours in privacy,
Naomi

Naomi Brockwell is a privacy advocacy and professional speaker, MC, interviewer, producer, podcaster, specialising in blockchain, cryptocurrency and economics. She runs the NBTV channel on Rumble.

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Meet Nextcloud – the collaboration platform that fully replaces Microsoft 365

Advertising partnership with Teuton Systems

Did you know your company can save significant IT costs today without compromising on functionality or user-friendliness? Teuton Systems, as one of the first providers in the Nordic region, offers installation of Nextcloud - the world's leading alternative to Microsoft 365.

Published today 14:04
5 minute read

Nextcloud is a collaboration platform that brings together file management, document editing, calendar, contacts and communication tools in one place. Just like Google Workspace or Microsoft 365, it gives employees the ability to work with documents wherever they are, share files with colleagues and have video meetings – but with one crucial difference: you decide where your data is stored and who has access to it.

More than 400,000 organizations worldwide, from the French Ministry of the Interior to Swedish universities, have chosen Nextcloud to maintain control over their information.

Features in Nextcloud

File management that works everywhere: Upload documents, images and files from your computer and access them from your phone, tablet or any other device. When someone updates a document, everyone else sees the change immediately. No emails with “latest version” as an attachment – everyone works with the same file.

Work together in real time: Through integrated office tools, multiple people can edit the same document, spreadsheet or presentation simultaneously directly in the web browser. You see what your colleagues are writing as they write it.

Communicate and organize: Nextcloud Talk offers video meetings, chat and screen sharing without any external services like Zoom or Teams. Shared calendar and contacts make it easy to coordinate meetings and ensure everyone on the team has the same information.

Integration: The system can be connected to existing tools like Active Directory, SharePoint and other business systems. Over 200 add-ons are available to customize the platform according to specific needs.

Open and edit documents directly in the web browser through cutting-edge integration of word processors and other document apps.

Why choose Nextcloud over Google or Microsoft?

1. You decide where your data is stored – and it matters

When you use Google Workspace or Microsoft 365, all your files, emails and documents end up on servers in the USA. This means that US authorities can demand access to your data through laws like the US Cloud Act – often without you knowing about it. For a Swedish company, this could mean that sensitive information about customers, employees or trade secrets is suddenly accessible to foreign authorities.

With Nextcloud, you decide where your data is stored. You can either have the system on your own server in your office, or choose a local hosting provider. Either way, everything stays within your country’s borders, which automatically means GDPR compliance without complicated data processing agreements. This is why Swedish government agencies like Försäkringskassan (the Swedish Social Insurance Agency) and Transportstyrelsen (the Swedish Transport Agency) have chosen Nextcloud – they must be able to guarantee that citizens’ information is protected.

2. Skip monthly costs – save thousands of euros

Google Workspace and Microsoft 365 cost money every month for every person in the company. For a company with Microsoft 365 Business Premium and 50 employees, it amounts to approximately €13,500 per year – that’s €67,500 over a five-year period. And prices tend to increase over time.

Nextcloud is open source and completely free to use. The only thing you pay for is the server it runs on and any support services. A server for 50 people costs around €2,000 to purchase, plus around €500 per year for electricity and maintenance. Over five years: €4,500 instead of €67,500 – a saving of over €63,000.

Even if you choose to let an external provider handle the actual server operation, the cost becomes a fraction of what Google or Microsoft charges. And you get unlimited storage based on your hardware – no limit on how much you can store.

Access all company files and documents in your own “cloud” regardless of where you are without dependence on Microsoft, Google and other tech giants.

3. Complete security control

When your files are with Google or Microsoft, it’s their security routines that apply. You can’t control what happens behind the scenes. With Nextcloud, you have full insight and control.

You can, among other things:

  • Require two-factor authentication for all users
  • See exactly who opened which files and when
  • Set rules for what types of files can be uploaded or downloaded
  • Activate encryption that makes it so not even the system administrator can read the content
  • Decide that certain files are automatically deleted after a certain time

 

Since Nextcloud is open source, anyone can review the code for security flaws. This means that problems are discovered and fixed quickly by thousands of developers worldwide. Compare that to closed systems where security problems can lie hidden for years.

Nextcloud is also the first cloud platform to receive Blauer Engel certification (Germany’s official environmental label), which confirms both security and sustainability.

4. Customize the system according to your needs

With Google or Microsoft, you get the apps and features they offer – no more, no less. With Nextcloud, you can add exactly the features your company needs through over 200 available add-ons.

Do you need tools for visual project management? Forms to collect information from customers? Integration with your existing accounting software or customer system? Custom appearance that matches the company’s graphic profile? All of this can be implemented.

If the company grows, Nextcloud scales with it – from five to five hundred users without you needing to change systems or sign new expensive contracts.

5. No lock-in – you decide

Once you’ve put all your data with Google or Microsoft, it’s troublesome to move. It’s designed that way – the more locked in you are, the harder it is to switch. But what happens if they raise prices? Or if their service is down for a whole day? Or if a conflict arises with American interests that choose to limit access to services in Europe?

With Nextcloud, you own your data and can move it when you want, where you want. All data is saved in open standard formats that work everywhere. Want to change hosting provider? Move from the cloud to your own server? Or vice versa? No problem. You’re never locked in.

Keep all company internal meetings and calls with business partners privacy-secure on your own server without outside surveillance with access to meeting rooms, meeting recording, transcription and modern AI functions.

Getting started with Nextcloud

You don’t need to be a technical expert to use Nextcloud. The interface is intuitive and works exactly as you expect – click to open files, drag and drop to upload, share with a link.

For installation and configuration, there are companies that specialize in this. Teuton Systems is a Swedish technology company based in Dalarna, Sweden that works with privacy-promoting technology and open source solutions. They help companies install, configure and maintain Nextcloud. With support in Swedish and English, you get help through the entire process – from planning to ongoing operation.

Technical overview:

  • Files and storage: Unlimited storage based on your hardware, automatic file versions, password-protected file sharing
  • Collaboration: Real-time document editing, video conferences, chat, calendar, contacts
  • Security: AES-256 encryption, two-factor authentication, detailed logging, GDPR compliance
  • Compatibility: Works in web browsers, available as app for Windows, Mac, Linux, iOS and Android
  • Cost: License-free open source, possibility to sign enterprise support on annual basis

 

Contact: Call Teuton Systems at +46 10 10 11 222 or visit teuton-systems.com to get help getting started and assess whether Nextcloud fits your business.

 

Swedish government proposal: Scraps nuclear power ban along coast and archipelago

Published yesterday 16:21
– By Editorial Staff
Even the Stockholm archipelago could become a potential location for nuclear power facilities if the Swedish government's proposal goes through.
2 minute read

The Environmental Code’s ban on nuclear facilities in large parts of Sweden’s coastal and archipelago areas should be removed, the Swedish government proposes. A consultation proposal has been sent out and must be answered by December 15 at the latest.

During a nuclear power conference at the Grand Hotel in Stockholm, Sweden, Climate and Environment Minister Romina Pourmokhtari (Liberal Party) presented plans to make the coast accessible for nuclear power expansion.

— We are now making the entire coast, including our islands, available for nuclear installations. New reactors are necessary for us to be able to live fossil-free lives, she says.

The changes affect several areas along the Swedish coast. Among others, Bohuslän (western Sweden), Öland, Gotland (Baltic Sea islands), and the Stockholm archipelago will become available for nuclear facilities. Coastal areas in Småland and Östergötland (from Simpevarp to Arkösund) as well as in Ångermanland (from Storfjärden to Skagsudde) in northern Sweden are also included in the proposal.

— We need the possibility to evaluate all suitable locations for new nuclear power, we cannot exclude them in advance, says the environment minister in a comment to TT.

“Nuclear power has been badly treated”

The climate minister justifies the changes by saying nuclear power is needed to create a “sustainable future”.

— We propose that nuclear facilities should be exempted from these restrictions, they have a crucial role for a sustainable and reliable future, she continues.

Despite the ban being removed, protection for natural and cultural values should be maintained according to the proposal.

“Today’s ban excludes locations that could be suitable without allowing an assessment in individual cases. The legal change creates conditions for more actors who want to build and invest in nuclear facilities along the coast”, it reads among other things.

The Swedish government expects the changes to take effect on July 1, 2026.

— Nuclear power has been badly treated and neglected for decades. But that has now changed. A new licensing process is being introduced, Pourmokhtari states.

Your battery life reveals more than you think

Published 4 October 2025
– By Naomi Brockwell
5 minute read

I’ve been running a little experiment the past 10 days.
I carried two phones everywhere: my Google Fi device and my GrapheneOS device.

Every night, here’s how the batteries compared:
• Google Fi: about 5% left
• GrapheneOS: about 50–75% left

What’s going on here? Am I really using the Google Fi phone 2–4x more?

Actually it’s the opposite.
My GrapheneOS phone is my daily driver. That’s where I use Signal, Brave, podcasts, audiobooks, email, camera, notes, calendar, my language app, and other things.

Meanwhile, on my Google Fi phone, I’ve installed exactly two apps: Signal and Google Maps, and I also use it as an internet hotspot. I deleted as many preinstalled apps as I could without breaking the phone, but there are countless ones I can’t remove.

At first glance you might think the hotspot is what’s draining the battery. That’s certainly a factor, but for context I turn the device to airplane mode (and shutting off the hotspot) whenever I’m not using it.

Even with “aggressive battery saver” enabled and hours in airplane mode, the Google phone churned through its battery like crazy.

The fact that the Google phone’s battery still dies so quickly is revealing. Battery drain can actually be a useful indicator of how private your device is. Some of this comes down to deliberate privacy choices, and some of it comes from the inherent design of each operating system.

Why battery drain is a privacy clue

Battery life is a rough but useful proxy for what’s happening under the hood.
If your phone is dead by dinnertime even when you barely use it, something else is doing the work. And “something else” usually means:
• Background services constantly phoning home
• Analytics trackers collecting usage data
• System-level apps pinging servers even when you think they’re off
• Push notification frameworks that keep connections alive 24/7

That invisible activity not only kills your battery, it shows how much your phone is reporting back without your consent.

Your privacy choices also matter

The way I use my devices also makes a huge impact on how much background activity is happening.

On Graphene, I silo apps across six profiles. My main profile has all the functionality I mentioned before. And I’m constantly using the device, but a lot of what I do doesn’t require connectivity. I can take pictures, listen to music, write notes, and listen to audiobooks all without needing to be online.

When I want to check messages, email, or browse the internet, I simply turn WiFi on, and when I’m done I turn it off again (like turning off a light switch when I leave a room).

I also have other apps I rarely use, some of which are more privacy-invasive, like Uber or others that require sandboxed Google Play Services. These are kept in secondary profiles, and when those profiles are inactive, they’re effectively powered off. This means there’s no chance of these apps running in the background.

Meanwhile, on the Google Fi phone, even though I tried to delete as much bloatware as possible, there are countless apps I can’t uninstall and processes I can’t turn off.

Google Play Services is the biggest offender: It’s a hugely invasive process with elevated system permissions that is always on. You can think of it as a hidden operating system layered on top of Android, handling push notifications, location data, updates, and telemetry. It’s not optional.

In some cases it can actually make your battery more efficient by centralizing notifications instead of having each app run its own system. But that depends entirely on how you use your device.

For example, I don’t have a ton of apps on that device that need all their processes to be centralized in a single, more efficient system. I just have 2 apps.

And I don’t use notifications at all, which means that the centralization of push notification services isn’t helpful to me. And even if I did use notifications, Signal is capable of handling its own push notifications without Google Play Services. So for my setup, having Play Services constantly pinging servers and running countless background processes is overkill. It makes a data-minimalist setup impossible.

Why GrapheneOS performs differently

Unlike most Android phones, and especially Google Fi, GrapheneOS doesn’t come with bloatware. It doesn’t have the same preinstalled junk running in the background — it’s an incredibly stripped down OS. If you want Google play services you can install it, but it’s sandboxed just like any other app, without elevated permissions. That means it doesn’t get special system access to spy on everything you do like it does on Android.

On top of that, GrapheneOS lets you isolate apps into separate profiles, each with its own encryption key and background permissions. Apps in one profile can’t see or interact with apps in another.

This not only improves security, it massively reduces unnecessary background chatter. Most of the Graphene phone spends its day idle, instead of phoning home.

Background activity = surveillance

This comparison proved to me that even on a pared-down Google phone with limited use, there are countless processes running behind the scenes that I don’t control and don’t need.

And those processes make a huge difference in how fast the battery disappears.

Other phones show the same pattern

I compared my results with others in my travel group. Their iPhones drained quickly too, even with moderate use. Apple is better than Android on privacy, but iPhones are still packed with system services constantly talking to Apple and 3rd party servers. Background iCloud sync, location lookups, telemetry reporting, Siri analytics etc all adds up.

In short: if your phone battery is always gasping for air, it’s because it’s working for someone else.

Battery life is a window into privacy. If your phone is constantly trying to talk to servers you didn’t ask it to, it’s both:

  1. Bad for your battery
  2. Bad for your privacy

Why this matters

When I travel, I want peace of mind that my phone won’t die halfway through the day. But even more than that, I want confidence that it isn’t secretly working for someone else.

I don’t pretend to know every technical reason that Google Fi and Apple drain so fast, but I do know that I have far less control over their processes than I do on Graphene. On Graphene, I can granularly control which apps access the internet, I can eliminate Google Play Services entirely, I can block apps from accessing sensors they don’t need. I can essentially be a data minimalist, while still having all the connectivity I want on the go.

And the difference in performance is stark. My Graphene phone lasts all day, even with heavy use. It’s calm, efficient, and private. The others are invasive, have hidden connections, and more background processes.

Battery life and privacy are more connected that we might realize, and GrapheneOS is winning on both. It’s another reason why switching to Graphene was one of my favorite privacy choices I’ve ever made.

Check out our video here if you’d like to learn how to install it:

 

Yours in privacy,
Naomi

Naomi Brockwell is a privacy advocacy and professional speaker, MC, interviewer, producer, podcaster, specialising in blockchain, cryptocurrency and economics. She runs the NBTV channel on Rumble.

Elon Musk plans Wikipedia rival – building encyclopedia with AI

Published 3 October 2025
– By Editorial Staff
Musk has long criticized Wikipedia for being extremely politically correct and urged people to stop donating to the encyclopedia.
2 minute read

Tech billionaire Elon Musk has announced plans to launch Grokipedia, an AI-based encyclopedia that will compete with and according to Musk be a “massive improvement” over Wikipedia. The project builds on his xAI chatbot Grok.

Musk announced the plans on X on Tuesday. Grokipedia will be built using his AI chatbot Grok, which was developed as an alternative to ChatGPT and trained on web data, including public tweets.

In a podcast earlier this month, Musk described how the technology will work.

— Grok is using heavy amounts of inference compute to look at, as an example, a Wikipedia page, what is true, partially true, or false, or missing in this page.

— Now rewrite the page to correct, remove the falsehoods, correct the half-truths, and add the missing context.

Musk has long criticized Wikipedia for being extremely politically correct and urged people to stop donating to the encyclopedia.

Critics often accuse the site of having transformed into a political weapon with a strong left-liberal bias. Conservative and nationalist perspectives are deliberately portrayed as extreme and dangerous, while left-wing and liberal positions are presented as positive or objective facts.

Grokipedia is expected to attract an audience among Musk’s followers and others who agree that Wikipedia has transformed into a politically biased propaganda tool rather than a neutral reference source.

Wikipedia – a propaganda weapon?

In an interview with Tucker Carlson, Wikipedia co-founder Larry Sanger recently launched a harsh attack on what his creation has become.

— Wikipedia became a weapon of ideological theological war, used to destroy its enemies, Sanger stated in the interview published on X.

He described how the encyclopedia he founded in 2001 together with Jimmy Wales to bring together people with different perspectives has now become a propaganda tool.

— The left has its march through the institutions. And when Wikipedia appeared, it was one of the institutions that they marched through, Sanger explained.

Controlled by anonymous editors

He also criticized the fact that the most powerful editors are anonymous, that conservative sources are blacklisted and that intelligence services have been involved in editing content on Wikipedia.

— We don’t know who they are. They can libel people with impunity, because they’re anonymous, Sanger said about the anonymous editors.

Wikipedia has encountered internal conflicts among editors about how certain events should be presented. The site is the seventh most visited website in the world. When Grokipedia will be launched has not yet been announced.

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