# Privacy Footprint My privacy footprint is much different than others — as a journalist, googling my own name brings up articles, staff pages, and social profiles that showcase my work. I discovered today that I even have a knowledge panel on the side. Sure, it has outdated information, but it is still cool to have that available. ![](https://i.imgur.com/j3q3HMW.jpg) There's also a carousel of recent articles I've written, which is nice to know that if someone does search my name they can easily find some of my work. ![](https://i.imgur.com/wjTCex6.png) I did a Spokeo search of my phone number, which shows my location as near my hometown. That makes sense logically, as my area code is within that area even when I'm at school. Similar with social media, my Twitter is a professional account that is public for a reason. So it is not in my interest at all to be private, and the ads don't really affect me much even when they're personalized. I don't have TikTok, and I don't use Facebook enough to be concerned about it tracking me. I can't even remember the last time I had a conversation on Facebook Messenger, so even though the piece by Rich Haridy shows that Facebook was listening to audio conversations, that wouldn't actually affect me. Even though Facebook gets info from the devices I'm logged in on to personalize ads, I don't check Facebook. So they can personalize those ads all they want and make some money from advertisers, but I'm not seeing any of them.