Let’s get this out of the way: wanting privacy doesn’t make you shady. It makes you sane.
The argument “if you’ve got nothing to hide, you’ve got nothing to fear” sounds logical — until you apply it to real life. You close your curtains. You lock your bathroom door. You don’t publish your search history on a billboard.
Not because you're a criminal. But because you're a human. And humans deserve space — mental, emotional, and digital — where they aren’t being watched, logged, or judged.
Privacy isn’t about hiding something bad. It’s about protecting something personal. You wouldn’t write a love letter on a public forum. You wouldn’t cry in a room full of strangers. You wouldn’t share your medical details with a marketing firm (unless you're Facebook).
And yet, when it comes to the internet, we’re told that privacy is suspicious. As if choosing not to be tracked makes you the problem.
The real threat isn’t what you’re hiding. It’s what they’re collecting. And just to give you an idea, check out this BareSend article: Zero Tracking Zero Regrets.
Data builds profiles. Profiles shape algorithms. Algorithms influence what you see, think, buy, believe.
That’s not safety. That’s subtle control.
So yes — you have nothing to hide. But you also have everything to protect.
Privacy isn’t a luxury. It’s not a niche concern. It’s a basic human need. And at BareSend, it’s non-negotiable.