Resources
last updated 2026-06-17 · 11 resources · what changed
Not every useful thing is an "install this tool" recommendation. External sites worth bookmarking: breach checkers, terms-of-service reviewers, and free utility collections that don't fit the format of the rest of this site, but earn a place in the bookmarks bar anyway.
breach & exposure checking
DataBreach.com
Breach notification and lookup service: check whether your data has surfaced in a known breach.
breach lookuphaveibeenpwned.com
The original, most trusted breach-checking database. Also offers an email-notification service for future breaches.
disposable inboxtemp-mail.org
A disposable inbox for one-off signups. Much weaker than a real alias service: these addresses are public and guessable, and you lose the inbox forever. Use only for truly throwaway, one-time signups.
research & comparison
privacyguides.org
The project this site's format draws inspiration from. An excellent independent companion resource with its own deep tool comparisons.
crypto / no-kyckycnot.me
A database of cryptocurrency services that don't require identity verification (KYC).
curated collectionprivacypack.org
Another curated privacy tool collection, worth cross-referencing against this site's own picks.
policy reviewerprivacyspy.org
A terms-of-service and privacy-policy reviewer and rating site, reads the fine print so you don't have to.
policy reviewertosdr.org
"Terms of Service; Didn't Read": crowd-reviewed, rated summaries of services' terms of service and privacy policies.
hardening guidesdigital-defense.io
Digital security and privacy hardening guides, for going deeper than a single tool recommendation.
general collections & utilities
fmhy.net
A large, community-maintained collection of free media and tool resources covering far more than just privacy.
file conversionvert.sh
Local, in-browser file format conversion: your files never get uploaded to a server.
worth knowing
Treat external rating sites as a second opinion, not a verdict. A
crowd-reviewed score on tosdr.org or a write-up on
privacyspy.org is a useful starting point for judging a
service's policy, but always check the date on the review and the
policy itself before relying on it.