privacy made me way more honest in my journal

https://lemmy.world/post/44525160

privacy made me way more honest in my journal - Lemmy.World

I used to journal in a paper notebook and I always held back. Not consciously — but somewhere in the back of my mind I knew someone could find it. My partner, my roommate, whoever. So I’d self-censor without realizing it. When I switched to a digital journal with Face ID lock, something shifted. I started writing things I’d never written before. Not dark secrets or anything dramatic — just honest feelings. “I’m jealous of my friend’s promotion.” “I love my partner but I’m not sure I’m in love anymore.” “I don’t think I’m a good person sometimes.” Those thoughts existed before. I just never gave them a place to live. Having them locked behind biometrics made my brain go “okay, this is actually safe.” And writing those honest thoughts is where the real value of journaling lives. The surface-level “today was good” entries are fine but they don’t move the needle. The app I use keeps everything on my device — no cloud, no account, no one can access it but me. That matters more than any fancy feature. When you know it’s truly private, you write differently. If you journal, how honest are you really? Do you hold back? What would change if you knew nobody could ever read it?

Face ID lock is really insecure. It can be bypassed with a photograph, or with someone scanning you when you’re asleep or detained. In many jurisdictions police are allowed to force you to unlock face ID lock without a warrant (and the same goes for fingerprint locks).

I’m sorry to not respond to your question, but your sense of privacy shouldn’t be built on a false basis. Please use a password instead.