Digital safety: Using online platforms safely as a journalist

The Facebook app is shown on a smart phone, on April 23, 2021, in Surfside, Florida. Interacting online can bring safety risks for journalists. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

Journalists use a wide range of online platforms to distribute their work and communicate with sources and audiences. Platforms that allow interaction with others, like social media, wikis that allow collaborative editing, or content hosting services like WordPress and Substack, can all present security issues for you and others in your networks. There are, however, steps you can take to better protect yourself.

Protect your accounts

Turn on two-factor authentication (2FA) for all accounts that allow it. This added layer of security helps prevent unauthorized access by requiring anyone who enters your password to provide a second layer of verification, often a code generated on your phone or a security key you carry with you.

Create long, unique passwords of at least 16 characters. Include numbers, letters, and symbols to make it harder to crack.

Learn more about protecting your accounts in CPJ’s Digital Safety Kit.

What you share

Private vs public

Content that you post privately might not be as private as you think. Other people on the platform – or people who work for the company that runs it – may be able to see it. Be mindful of the following:

Personal data

Online platforms collect a lot of data about you that other people, including government officials, can access and use to surveil and harass you.

Images

Images that you post online can give away a lot of information.

Read transparency reports

Tech companies and other organizations release regular transparency reports about the requests they receive from governments to access or remove data, which can help inform your decisions about which services are safe for you to use. Examples include Google, Facebook, Twitter, Wikimedia, and WordPress.

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