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Books are made out of books

· 2 min read
Rus

I've been consuming a lot of articles lately in order to understand the reader's expectations and many interesting sources are filling the creative well. New York Times writes extensively on this topic, I like these examples "Why You Need a Password Manager. Yes, You," "10 Tips to Avoid Leaving Tracks Around the Internet" or similar on privacy as well "How to Protect Your Digital Privacy". About two-factor authentication - "Protecting Your Internet Accounts Keeps Getting Easier. Here’s How to Do It.." Another older article from another source was about "9 internet scams we're still falling for in 2018."

When the coding backend of the book is in its progress I'm starting to lean towards research on currently available books on cyber security. Starting from "Hack-Proof Your Life Now!: The New Cybersecurity Rules: Protect your email, computers, and bank accounts from hacks, malware, and identity theft" I am going to absorb all these books and hoping to improve my vision on what should I write and how to present it clearly.

  • Boost your security (an unprecedented wave of cyber attacks and data breaches). While you can't stop hackers from sweeping up your data held by corporations and governments, you can prevent cyber criminals from using it against you.
  • Email address is the key to your digital life: it shouldn't be everywhere.
  • Love your passwords, lose weight, and beat the password paradox.
  • Rule #2: use mnemonic, goal-setting, or poetic passwords.
  • The two-step process that stops hackers. About enabling two-factor verification on your email and financial accounts.
  • Too many passwords and the unbreakable solution. Use a password manager for unbreakable protection.

That was the end of the free sample. I liked that idea with pre-story with real life examples for each chapter, action steps with what to do impliment for better security for each chapter, date of completion and score points for each step.