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Home SECURITY Privacy & Data Protection

Tech That Tracks You: Why Going Off-Grid Is More Important Than Ever

The Age of Quiet Surveillance

It used to take a badge and a warrant to track someone. Today it only takes a smartphone, a database, or a “smart” gadget on your kitchen counter. Step outside, and cameras record you. Drive through town, and license plate scanners log your route. Sit at home, and your TV, phone, and digital assistant may be feeding information to companies you have never heard of.

In 2025, the grid that monitors our every move has become a living organism. It grows quietly through apps, smart appliances, and connected cars. Most people accept it as the price of convenience. But those of us who believe in independence should see it for what it is: the slow disappearance of private life. If you value freedom, now is the time to take back your ground and start living a little more off-grid.

Digital IDs: A Shortcut to Constant Oversight

The new “mobile ID” is being sold as progress. Dozens of states now offer driver’s licenses that live inside your phone. The pitch is that it’s easier to carry and harder to lose. What you are not told is that digital IDs are built on a system that can report when and where you use them. Each scan could become a data point in a government or corporate database.

Privacy advocates have warned that a digital ID can quietly turn into a tracking tool. Imagine showing your ID at a pharmacy, a gun shop, or a political event and having that moment recorded. Officials promise they will not activate those features, but promises change. A physical card in your wallet cannot spy on you. A phone app can.

Smartphones: The Tracker We Carry Willingly

We have all grown used to the idea that our phones are part of us. But that convenience comes with a heavy cost. Every cell tower, Wi-Fi signal, and app interaction leaves a footprint. Companies gather that data, bundle it, and sell it to brokers. Law enforcement agencies can buy it too, often without a warrant.

Investigations have exposed tools that let police pull detailed movement histories from ordinary phone data sold by apps. One company’s database holds records from hundreds of millions of devices, mapping where people eat, work, and sleep. In effect, our own phones have become surveillance nodes.

If privacy matters to you, treat your phone as a risk, not a right. Turn it off when you do not need it. Leave it behind for short errands. Disable location settings and delete unnecessary apps. In a real emergency, a basic prepaid flip phone is far safer than a smart device tied to your identity.

Eyes Everywhere: Facial Recognition Expands

A decade ago, facial recognition was a novelty. Now it is routine. Airports scan passengers in the name of security. Police departments use it to identify suspects. Retailers test it to flag shoplifters or profile shoppers. Even schools are installing cameras that can match faces against databases in seconds.

The problem is accuracy and control. False matches have already led to wrongful arrests. Studies show these systems often misidentify minorities at far higher rates. Yet they continue to spread. Companies like Clearview AI boast of face databases that include most Americans, built from billions of scraped social media images.

Once your face is in a system like that, it is there forever. You cannot change it. You cannot hide it. And you have no say in how it is used. The best defense is awareness. Know where cameras are, keep your head down, and remember that every image online is one more piece of your digital fingerprint.

The Spies Inside the Home

Not all surveillance comes from outside. Many people have invited it in. Smart TVs, thermostats, speakers, and refrigerators now fill homes across the country. Each one collects data. Each one connects to the internet. That means each one can be hacked, misused, or mined for profit.

A few years back, investigators found that certain smart TVs were secretly logging everything viewers watched, second by second, and selling the data to advertisers. The same logic applies to every connected gadget. A speaker that listens for your voice, a camera at your door, and a vacuum that maps your floors are all potential entry points for outsiders.

Before you buy any smart device, ask yourself whether you truly need it. A simple TV, a manual thermostat, or a wired camera cannot leak what it does not collect. In most cases, the old-fashioned version does the job better and lasts longer.

On the Road: License Plate Readers

For years, drivers thought that leaving home meant a break from surveillance. Not anymore. Automated license plate readers have turned public roads into tracking corridors. Mounted on police cruisers, light poles, and highway signs, these cameras scan thousands of plates every minute. Each scan is tagged with time, date, and location.

Police use these systems to find stolen vehicles and wanted suspects, but the data often stays stored for months or years. Private companies also run networks of plate readers, selling access to law enforcement and businesses alike. Once that data exists, it is only a matter of time before it is used for more than traffic enforcement.

The result is a society where travel itself is monitored. Every commute, every trip, every visit can be reconstructed by anyone with access to the system.

Reclaiming Privacy in Daily Life

Living off-grid today is less about isolation and more about intention. You can still use modern tools, but on your terms.

Start with cash. Card payments record where you shop and what you buy. Cash leaves no trail. The same goes for paper maps instead of phone navigation. Books and DVDs instead of endless streaming. Face-to-face conversations instead of social media chats.

Be selective about technology. If a gadget connects to the internet, it collects data. Choose simpler versions that do not. Keep your phone off when it is not needed, and do not bring it everywhere. Review every account you have online, delete the ones you do not use, and stop handing out personal details to companies that see you as a product.

You do not have to abandon the grid entirely, but you can stop feeding it.

The Prepper’s Approach to Digital Freedom

Prepping has always been about foresight. The goal is to be ready when systems fail or turn against you. The same applies to privacy. Build habits now that protect your information later. Have backups for communication, navigation, and records that do not depend on the cloud. Learn to live comfortably with less connectivity.

In a crisis, information control is survival. Those who rely entirely on digital tools will have none. But those who keep skills and resources offline will still function. Privacy is not paranoia; it is preparedness.

Final Thoughts

Technology is not evil, but blind trust in it is dangerous. The more data we surrender, the easier it becomes for others to watch, influence, and control us. The systems built for convenience today could be turned into tools of coercion tomorrow.

Going off-grid does not mean disappearing. It means choosing when to connect and when to step away. It means owning your information instead of giving it away. In a world that tracks everything, privacy is the new frontier of freedom.

Start small. Use cash. Read a real book. Turn the phone off for an afternoon. Every step away from the grid is a step toward independence, and that is what true preparedness has always been about.

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Alec Deacon

Alec Deacon

Alec Deacon is the owner of Backyard Liberty.com. He’s very passionate about survival and he’s constantly looking for the best ways to protect his family - his wife Ana and the two boys, David and Andrew, that are the world to him. He used to work as a hygiene officer in a well-known US company, being in charge with food safety. In the time spent there he learned a lot about food: cooking, storing, freezing, transporting… basically everything that has to do with food safety. He is also a huge fan of outdoor living. Fishing carp is one of the things he loves most and it just happens that fishing is also one of the oldest and most basic survival skill.

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Comments 2

  1. Terry Dean Queen says:
    1 month ago

    I really feel sorry for the young ones this day and time because they can’t seem to keep their face out of their phone even while walking, it’s actually pathetic at least I think it is anyway. Yes here I am leaving a message on an app which probably makes me a hypocrite but I am starting to understand about this information age and these pointers I just read about sound pretty good. I think I’m going to give it a try and only turn my phone on in one spot each time I turn it on and maybe I won’t be tracked. I know you can get these film things that go over your license plate that keeps them from being photographed and I think I’m going to try that also. Who knows maybe I can disappear and ride around too wouldn’t that be awesome. Y’all stay hidden now you here.

    Reply
  2. allan rhodes says:
    1 month ago

    I own nothing that is called “smart” and I never have and never will. I use cheap burner phones. Not because of any nefarious activities, but because that is all I need. I don’t have a smart phone as that is the electronic tag. But it is getting more and more difficult to manage without one. RyanAir will only accept boarding with a smart phone and not paper. That is me finished with them. Always use cash where possible but it does cause problems. I was in Venice once and the hotel was extremely reluctant to take cash for our stay !
    EV are another no no. Beside a severe fire risk they can be easily controlled which is the whole idea. Most people need to wake up to what is happening although I fear that is too late already.

    Reply

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