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Transgender online safety

Online resources have changed how our community lives and learns. As with anything, there are good and bad parts to that. We have to think about our personal safety, and that includes when we are online.

The very safest option is only going online to gather transition information and not using it to interact with others. Even then, you should take a few precautions to avoid being outed.

Safest option: Your own device

Less safe: Multiple users on a device

If you have to share a computer or device with family members, you should take precautions if you don’t want them to find anything out.

Potentially unsafe: computers outside the home

Avoid browsing on a computer outside your home (like at libraries, work, school, or at a friend’s, printing shops, cafés, etc.) unless you’re certain no one you know will find out. If you have to use a computer outside the home, you should only look at stuff that you wouldn’t mind if your boss, instructor, friends, family, classmates or coworkers saw. There’s always a chance they might.

Using a work computer is probably the most risky, for these reasons:

Be extremely careful using group computers at school if you aren’t out. Word could spread very quickly among fellow students.

If you absolutely must use a computer outside the home, take all the precautions above for multiple-user home computers.

Social networking and forums

Visiting websites

As I mentioned at the top, this is the safest way to get information. Just make sure the site is legit. In recent years, there have been several fake transgender teen sites put up by pathetic scumbags. Sometimes these sites have erroneous advice, but usually they want you to email them. If you aren’t sure if someone is the real deal, contact me, and I’ll see what I can find out.

Remember, not only can people monitor you from your end, but website owners can monitor you from their end. For instance, I can tell when someone visits my sites from a corporate site. If you are worried about this, you can browse safely through several ways.

Browsers have a private browsing mode, which can help but is not foolproof. You should also block cookies and use ad blocking software.

Not secure: Search engines like Google often have a “cached” option in results. That does not prevent your visit from being logged by the website in most cases. If the website contains images, you are still loading those images from the website rather than from Google.

As a general rule, don’t order stuff, write comments, fill out forms, take polls, or respond to phone numbers on websites.

Bottom line: browsing websites is generally quite safe, but only you can decide what level of precautions is right for you.

Parental controls and monitoring software

If you are reading this page, you probably are not being blocked by parental controls, but some computers may not let you visit this site. In addition, your parents may have software installed that allow them to see where you have been going online. It’s important to be careful if you think they will respond badly.

A reader writes:

Proxies and VPNs may be a way to get around business or family computer filters but there will still be the trace of the proxy URL. So I think the proxy would be more for kids who need to visit these websites under anonymity. A lot of parental controls block anonymous proxies, so it is very hard to find a good one. Sometime a search engine’s cached copy lets you see a site without it being blocked.

Purging your web browsing history after a session

In most browsers you can set your hard disk cache to 0. This will keep your computer from storing files from pages you have visited, but you still have to do something about that pesky history file, though

A reader suggests TorBrowser (torproject.org)

Safely interacting with others online

Many people have found support, friendship and good advice by interacting with others online. However, some have also been outed or attacked by those they met online. If you decide it’s worth the risk to interact with others online, there are still some precautions you should take.

You’ve probably seen this basic list before. Think of the web as a bunch of strangers in a park. You shouldn’t give strangers any of the following:

Email and text

A good rule: Never email or text anything you wouldn’t want everyone to see if it were shared at work or school.

I recommend using a “throwaway” web-based Gmail address. Don’t choose an email address containing identifying information, like your chosen name, your area code. Don’t pick something that identifies you as trans. Pick the name of a celebrity you like, or a flower, or something like that.

Probably the safest form of online interaction is private email correspondence with well-known organizations. See my list of youth resources for more.

Use caution when contacting someone you don’t know. People pretending to be trans could run the spectrum from relatively harmless middle-aged wannabes engaging in fantasy role-playing to dangerous sexual predators.

If you’re asking a question, try to do it without divulging personal information. It’s better to do that using a throwaway account on a transgender forum or subreddit.

Calling and meeting people from online

Be very careful calling or meeting anyone who is aware of your trans status. A good rule of thumb is not to call anyone unless someone trusted whom you have met in person will vouch for the person who wants to meet you. I don’t recommend calling people you meet online unless you are absolutely certain of their identity.

After transition

Once you have made a transition, you should consider scrubbing your internet presence under your old name and starting fresh. Trans people are frequently targeted by people who will look for your old name and information and use that to hurt you. Even if you plan to be out and proud, you may wish to be more private later. Starting fresh gives you a few more options.

I was doxxed almost as soon as I set up this website in the 1990s. I have no regrets about being out and proud, but it has caused me some problems. It’s not the end of the world, but it is something you may want to avoid if possible. I hope this helps you in making this very personal decision!

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