Press Release
WarRin Protocol: A point-to-point anonymous privacy communication system
Dr.WarRin
Summary
This white paper provides an explanation of the WarRin protocol and related blockchain, point-to-point, network value, transport protocol, and encryption algorithms. The limited space will highlight the WRC allocation scheme and purpose of the WarRin Protocol Token, which is important for achieving the WRC’s stated objectives. This white paper is for informational purposes only and is not a promise of final implementation details. Some details may change during the development and testing phases.
1. Introduction
Traditional centralized communication systems such as WeChat,WhatsApp, FacebookMessage,Google Allo,Skype face a range of problems, including government surveillance, privacy breaches, and inadequate security, and the WarRin protocol proposes apoint-to-pointencrypted communications system that leveragesblockchain technology, combined with Double Ratc het algorithms, pre-keys, and extended X3DH handshakes. The WarRin Protocol uses The Generalized Directional Acyclic Graph and Curve25519,AES-256, and HMAC-SHA256 as the pronamor, allowing each account to have its own unique account chain, providing unlimited instant communication between points and unlimited scalability, anonymity, integrity, consistency, and asynchronousness.
2. WarRin Protocol communication system
2.1 Two types of communication
The Waring Protocol communication system divides chat channels into two types.
Two modes of communication
- General Chat mode: Using point-to-point encrypted communication, the service side has access to the key and can log in via multiple devices.
- Secret Chat mode: Encrypted communication using point-to-point can only be accessed through two specific devices.
The design combines some of the advantages of raiBlocks multi-chain construction with IOTA/Byteball DAG, which we call the Waring protocol. With improvements, we have given the WarRin protocol greater throughput and faster processing power while ensuring the security of the ledger, and network nodes can store the ledger in less space and search their communications accounts quickly in the ledger. When two users communicate, third parties contain content that neither manager can access. When a user is chatting in secret, the message contains multimedia that can be designated as a self-destruct message, and when the message is read by the user, the message is automatically destroyed within the specified time. Once the message expires, it disappears on the user’s device.
2.2 How chat history is encrypted
2.2.1 MTProto Transport Protocol
MTProto transport protocol
The WarRin communication system draws on RaiBlocks’ multi-chain structure for point-to-point communication. Each account has its own chain that records the sending and receiving behavior of the account. For example, in Figure 1, there are 7 accounts, each with 7 chain records of the account sending and receiving communications. On the graph, horizontal coordinates represent the timeline, and portrait coordinates represent the index of the account.
Transferring information from one account to another requires two transactions: one to send a communication from the sender’s transfer content, and one to receive information to add that content to the content of the receiving account. Whether in a send-side account or a receiving account, a PoW proof of work with the previous communication content Hash is required to add new communications to the account. In the account chain, poWwork proves to be an anti-spam communication tool that can be done in seconds. In a single account chain, the Hash field of the previous block is known to pre-generate the PoW required for subsequent blocks. Therefore, as long as the time between the two communications is greater than the time required to generate the PoW, the user’s transaction will be completed instantaneously.
In such a design, only the receiving end of the communication is required for settlement. The receiving end places the received communication signature on the account chain, which is called accepted communication. Once accepted, the receiving end then broadcasts the communication to the ledger of the other nodes. However, there may be situations where the receiving end is not online or is subject to a DoS attack, which prevents the receiving end from putting the receiving side communication on the account chain, which we call uncommoted transactions. The X symbol in Figure 1 represents an open transaction sent from Account 2 to Account 5.
Obviously, because only the sending and receiving sides of the communication are required to settle, such communication is very lightweight, all traffic can be transmitted in a UDP package and processed very quickly. At the same time, all communications in an account are kept in one chain, with great integrity, and the ledger can be trimmed to a minimum. Some nodes are not interested in spending resources to store the full communication history of the account; They are only interested in the current communications for each account. When an account communicates, its accumulated information is encoded, and these nodes only need to keep track of the latest blocks so that historical data can be discarded while maintaining correctness. Such communication is only possible if the sending and receiving sides trust each other and are not the final settlement of the entire network consensus. There is a security risk in the absence of trust on the sending and receiving ends, or in situations where the receiving end is attacked by DoS without the sender’s knowledge.
We have observed that although each account has a separate chain, the entire ledger can be expressed in the form of a WarRin object. As shown in Figure 2, this is represented by the WarRin astros trading on all accounts in Figure 1.
The first unit in the WarRin object is the Genesis unit, the next six cells represent the allocation of the initial token, and the other units correspond to the communication transactions between the account chains. We use the symbol a/b to represent a communication transaction, where the sender is a andthe recipient is b. The last 4/1 unit in Figure 2 is the last communication corresponding to Figure 1 – sending communication from account 4 to account 1. A transaction in Figure 1 is a confirmation of the latest block or the latest communication on the account chains of both parties to the communication, reflected in Figure 2 as a reference to the latest units of the account chains of both parties to the communication. Take unit 4/1, for example, where the latest block on account 4 was the receiving block for 2/4 trades and the newest block on account 1 was the send block for 1/5 trade. So on the DAG, the 4/1 cell refers to the 2/4 cell and the 1/5 cell.
The WarRin protocol uses triangular shrapned storage technology to crack impossible triangles in the blockchain through the shrapghine technology, with extensive node engagement and decontalination while maintaining high throughput and security:
- Complete shraping of blockchain status;
- Secure and low-cost cross-synth trading;
- Completely random witness selection;
- Flexible and efficient configuration
Complete decentralization ensures absolute security and scalability of the standard chain.
(Figures above show seven Ling-shaped objects:2/1 one;3/2 one… )
2.2.2 Curve25519 Elliptic Curve Encryption Algorithm
Curve25519, proposed by Daniel Bernstein, is anelliptic curve algorithm for the exchange of The Montgomery Curve’s Difi Herman keys.
Montgomery Curve Curve Mathematical Expression:
Curve25519 Curve Mathematical Expression:
Curve25519 encryption algorithms are used for standard private and public keys, and the private keys used for Curve25519
encryption algorithms are typically defined as secret
indices, corresponding to
public keys, coordinate points, which are usually sufficient to perform ECDH (elliptical) and symmetrical elliptic curve encryption algorithms. If one party wants to send information to the other party and the other party has the
public
and private keys, perform the following
calculation:
Generate a one-time random secret
index, calculated using Montgomery, because the message is a symmetrical password encrypted using 256-bit sharing, such as AES using a 256-bit integer
one-time public key, as akey, and 256-bit integer is a
prefix to encrypted information. Once a party to
the public
key receives this message, it can start by calculating , that is ,
the receiver recovers the shared secret and
is able to decrypt the rest of the information.
3. Incentives
On the basis of the WarRin agreement, by adding the incentive layer, we can effectively avoid the whole network being attacked and eliminate spam. As long as honest nodes control most of the calculations, for an attacker, the network is robust because of its simplicity of structure, and nodes need little coordination to work at the same time. They do not need to be authenticated because information is not sent to a location.
3.1 WRC Certificate
WRC issued a total of 2,500,000 pieces and continued to increment according to the WoRin gain function.
3.1.1 WoRin Gain Function
3.1.2 WoRin gain function control table
| The WoRin gain function is compared to the table | ||
| Number of layers /F | Growth factor /I | WRC circulation |
| [1,50] | 0.002 | 334918.8057 |
| [51,100] | 0.002 | 780024.2108 |
| [101,150] | 0.004 | 1177129.617 |
| [151,200] | 0.006 | 1487860.923 |
| [201,250] | 0.01 | 1722637 |
| [251,300] | 0.016 | 1894309.216 |
| [301,400] | 0.03 | 2101623.789 |
| [401,500] | 0.06 | 2217555.464 |
| [501,1000] | 0.1 | 2450712.257 |
| [1001,2000] | 0.12 | 2557457.3 |
According to the Gain function, the
larger the number of layers,
the greater the growth rate, the faster each layer is filled, and the
greater the circulation.
3.2 Allocation
WarRin protocol node distribution
3.2.1 Node allocation
Set the initial price
to 0.02,the layer where the first node is located is , according to the equation of the iso-difference column, there is , so that the
node token is assigned to the piece, for the price of
the layer where the node
is located, there is a
set.
For example, the number of tiers in which the 98th node is located is Tier 13, and the price of Tier 13 is 0.214,the tokens assigned by Tier 98 are
3.2.2 Total number of address assignments
Each node occupies one address, and the total number of addresses is
4. The use
WRC is the native pass-through of the WarRin protocol, andWRC will assign to Genesis nodes according to the above allocation scheme, which together form the entire network, andWRC can be used in the following scenarios, including but not limited to:
Pay the network’s gas charges, i.e. for transferring money and invoking smart contracts;
System Staking tokens, used for node elections and token issues;
The capital is lent to the validator in exchange for the amount of the reward;
Voting rights for system proposals;
The means of payment for apps developed on WoRin Services;
WoRin Storage is a means of payment on the decentralization storage;
WoRin DNS domain name and WoRin WWW website means of payment;
WoRin Proxy agents hide the means of payment for body and IP addresses;
WoRin Proxy penetrates payment methods reviewed by local ISPs
……
5. Conclusions
Metcalfe’s Law states that thevalue of a network is equal to the square of the number of nodes within the network, and that the value of the network is directly related to the square of the number of connected users. That is ( the
value factor, the number of
users.) That is, the greater the number of users on a network, the greater the value of the entire network and each computer within that network. The WarRin protocol also follows this law, and when the number of nodes reaches a certain level, the entire network becomes more robust.
References
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application platform, https://github.com/ethereum/wiki/wiki/White-Paper, 2013.
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optimal resilience, in Proceedings of the thirteenth annual ACM symposium on
Principles of distributed computing, p. 183–192. ACM, 1994.
[4] M. Castro, B. Liskov, et al., Practical byzantine fault tolerance, Proceedings of the
Third Symposium on Operating Systems Design and Implementation (1999), p. 173–
186, available at http://pmg.csail.mit.edu/papers/osdi99.pdf.
[5] EOS. IO, EOS. IO technical white paper,
https://github.com/EOSIO/Documentation/blob/master/TechnicalWhitePaper.md,
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Private Internet Connections, Communications of the ACM, 42, num. 2 (1999),
http://www.onion-router.net/Publications/CACM-1999.pdf.
[7] L. Lamport, R. Shostak, M. Pease, The byzantine generals problem, ACM
Transactions on Programming Languages and Systems, 4/3 (1982), p. 382–401.
[8] S. Larimer, The history of BitShares,
https://docs.bitshares.org/bitshares/history.html, 2013.
[9] M. Luby, A. Shokrollahi, et al., RaptorQ forward error correction scheme for
object delivery, IETF RFC 6330, https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6330, 2011.
[10] P. Maymounkov, D. Mazières, Kademlia: A peer-to-peer infor- mation system
based on the XOR metric, in IPTPS ’01 revised pa- pers from the First International
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http://pdos.csail.mit.edu/~petar/papers/ maymounkov-kademlia-lncs.pdf, 2002.
About Author
Disclaimer: The views, suggestions, and opinions expressed here are the sole responsibility of the experts. No Digi Observer journalist was involved in the writing and production of this article.
Press Release
Daniel Tuffy Highlights Everyday Health System Trends People Can No Longer Ignore
Daniel Tuffy is a senior healthcare executive based in Gainesville, Georgia, focused on access to care, ambulatory services, and building healthier cultures for patients and providers.
Georgia, US, 3rd February 2026, ZEX PR WIRE, Senior healthcare executive Daniel Tuffy is calling attention to several trends that are quietly reshaping how individuals experience the health system. Drawing on more than two decades leading large physician groups and service lines, he is urging people to look beyond headlines and understand how access, burnout, and care settings are changing the day to day reality of getting help when they need it.
Across the United States, many people still struggle to get timely appointments with primary and specialty care. In recent national surveys, roughly 3 in 10 adults report delaying or skipping care due to cost, scheduling barriers, or logistical challenges. At the same time, ambulatory and outpatient surgery centers are taking on a growing share of procedures that used to be done only in hospitals, often at lower cost and with shorter recovery times.
Provider burnout is another trend that has moved from internal concern to public issue. Large professional associations and workforce studies consistently show that a significant share of physicians and nurses report high levels of emotional exhaustion and stress. This affects not only the people providing care but also access, continuity, and patient satisfaction.
Tuffy summarizes these shifts this way: access to the right care, in the right setting, with teams that are supported to do their best work is no longer a nice to have. It is now the baseline expectation individuals should look for when they navigate the system. When those pieces are missing, people feel it through long waits, rushed visits, and confusion about what comes next.
He notes that ambulatory surgery growth, improved scheduling systems, and virtual visits can all work in favor of patients if they are designed thoughtfully. But he also points out that technology and new buildings alone do not fix the core issues if organizations do not address workflows, communication, and the day to day barriers that wear clinicians down.
For individuals and families, the practical takeaway is simple: pay attention to how your providers and organizations talk about access, burnout, and quality. When leaders are transparent about these topics and share clear steps they are taking to improve them, it often signals a culture that is serious about long term performance rather than quick fixes.
Your Next 7 Days
These are small, concrete steps people can take in the next week to put these trends to work in their own lives.
-
Make a list of your care team
Write down the names, contact information and locations of your primary care provider, any specialists, and urgent care or ambulatory centers you might use. Knowing your options before you are sick shortens delays when something happens. -
Check access and after hours options
Look up office hours, same day appointment policies, nurse advice lines, and virtual visit options. Save key phone numbers in your phone so you are not searching under stress. -
Review your upcoming health needs
Think about routine screenings, follow ups, or refills you are likely to need in the next three to six months. Schedule at least one of them this week so you are not competing for last minute slots later. -
Ask one question about quality
At your next visit, ask how the clinic measures patient experience or outcomes. You are not looking for a perfect score, only for a clear, honest answer about what they track and how they use it. -
Notice staff workload and communication
Pay attention to how frontline staff interact with each other and with you. Calm, coordinated teams usually reflect better systems behind the scenes. If everything feels chaotic all the time, that can be a signal to plan for alternatives when possible. -
Set up your patient portal
If your provider offers an online portal, sign up and log in. Portals can make it easier to request refills, see test results, and send non urgent questions without long phone waits. -
Talk with family about an emergency plan
Spend ten minutes agreeing on where you would go for urgent needs, who would drive, and what information you would bring. A simple plan reduces stress in real emergencies and makes better use of healthcare resources.
Your Next 90 Days
Over the next three months, longer actions can help you build a more resilient relationship with the health system.
-
Establish or reconnect with your primary care
If you do not have a primary care provider, prioritize finding one in the next 90 days. If you do, schedule an annual visit or check in. Strong relationships in primary care improve access and coordination when problems arise. -
Compare care settings for common procedures
If you know a surgery or procedure is coming, ask where it can be done. In many cases, ambulatory surgery centers offer safe, high quality care at lower cost and with more flexible scheduling. Understanding your options helps you make informed choices. -
Organize your health information
Create a simple folder, digital or paper, with your medication list, major diagnoses, surgeries, allergies, and key contacts. Having this ready makes every visit smoother and reduces the chance of errors. -
Assess your providers’ communication style
Over several visits, notice whether your care team explains next steps clearly, involves you in decisions, and follows up when they say they will. If the pattern does not support trust, consider whether a different provider or organization might be a better fit over the long term. -
Support staff and clinicians where you can
Small actions such as arriving on time, using portals for routine questions, and offering specific feedback when something goes well help reduce friction. In a system where burnout is common, being a constructive partner in your own care can make a real difference at the margins.
Tuffy’s perspective is shaped by years overseeing clinical operations, budgets, and patient experience across large ambulatory and acute care networks. He emphasizes that the trends facing healthcare today are not abstract policy debates. They show up as the time it takes to get an appointment, the tone in the exam room, and the clarity you feel when you leave a visit.
For individuals, the goal is not to control the whole system. It is to understand where it is moving and take practical steps to protect access, quality, and continuity for themselves and their families.
Pick one step from the lists above and complete it this week. Small, deliberate moves today make it easier to navigate a complex health system tomorrow.
About Daniel Tuffy
Daniel Tuffy is a senior healthcare executive based in Gainesville, Georgia, with more than 20 years of experience leading strategic, operational, and clinical transformation across large health systems and physician groups. His work has focused on expanding access to ambulatory care, improving patient and provider experience, and building high performance cultures that support safe, high quality care.
About Author
Disclaimer: The views, suggestions, and opinions expressed here are the sole responsibility of the experts. No Digi Observer journalist was involved in the writing and production of this article.
Press Release
Jupiter Secures $35M Strategic Investment From ParaFi Capital to Accelerate Onchain Financial Infrastructure
The partnership reflects a long-term alignment between ParaFi and Jupiter, grounded in conviction around the protocol’s fundamentals, scale, and role in the evolving onchain financial system.
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, 2nd February 2026, ZEX PR WIRE, Jupiter, a global onchain finance platform with over $3 trillion in lifetime trading volume, announced a $35 million strategic investment from New York–based ParaFi Capital, a $2bn asset management firm focused on the digital asset ecosystem.

Over the past year, Jupiter processed more than $1 trillion in annual trading volume and expanded from a handful of trading tools into a fully integrated onchain platform spanning swaps, perpetuals, prediction markets, stablecoins, lending, and portfolio management. What began as a single-function interface has evolved into a comprehensive onchain financial hub, enabling users to trade, earn yield, and manage assets within a single application.
ParaFi’s investment extends Jupiter’s momentum into 2026, supporting its efforts to deepen institutional participation in onchain finance. Since its founding in 2018, ParaFi has backed a number of category-defining DeFi protocols.
“With Jupiter, we found a partner with a track record in product development throughout onchain finance,” said Ben Forman, Founder and Managing Partner at ParaFi Capital. “We see further onchain adoption as the future of finance, and we believe the Jupiter team can execute with speed and experience to deepen their market penetration.”
“We share a long-term vision with ParaFi on the timing and potential of onchain finance,” said Xiao-Xiao Zhu, President of Jupiter. “They’ve been building the bridge between traditional finance and onchain markets since 2018. That connectivity will play a large role in accelerating everything we’re doing at Jupiter.”
ParaFi Commits $35M to Jupiter With Extended Lockup and Structured Upside
ParaFi purchased tokens at market prices without a discount, agreed to an extended lockup, and received warrants to acquire additional tokens at materially higher prices, reflecting long-term alignment with Jupiter’s growth.
Notably, the transaction was settled entirely in JupUSD, highlighting confidence in Jupiter’s stablecoin infrastructure and its suitability for large-scale institutional flows.
“This partnership isn’t really about the capital,” Kash Dhanda, COO of Jupiter, added. “What mattered most was finding a partner with deep credibility who could catalyze our growth as we build the next stage of onchain finance.”
Bootstrapped from day one and profitable throughout its lifespan, Jupiter has never taken any outside capital, marking the ParaFi partnership as a historic first.
“We are seeing a rapid convergence between DeFi and traditional capital markets,” said Anjan Vinod, Managing Director at ParaFi Capital. “We’re excited to bring our almost eight-year operating history to support Jupiter as it deepens its core DeFi stack while expanding into new products across tokenization, payments, and asset management.”
Jupiter Reveals Product Suite Expansion at CatLumpurr
At its recent CatLumpurr conference in Kuala Lumpur from January 31 – February 2, Jupiter announced over 40 new major product launches and upgrades.
With the unveilings at CatLumpurr, Jupiter expanded both its existing product suite and its total addressable market.
-
- Jupiter Lend – the fastest-growing protocol in Solana history, reaching $1B in total supply eight days after the public launch. Several initiatives are underway to unlock billions in latent institutional capital for deployment
- JupUSD: The first truly onchain-native stablecoin, designed to share underlying economics back to the ecosystem and challenge industry norms.
- JupNet – the omnichain network that seeks to aggregate all of crypto into one unified decentralized ledger, allowing users to swap, deposit, and trade across chains with ease
- Jupiter Global – Real-world onchain payments with Jupiter Card, Global Send enabling USD SWIFT transfers to 200+ countries, local payouts in 15+ currencies, and QR Pay for scan-to-pay across APAC with 0% fees. Available on the Jupiter Mobile app.
- Prediction Markets with Polymarket Integration – Jupiter, the first Solana partner for Kalshi, is now the first and only Polymarket venue on Solana, platforming onchain activity for the world’s largest prediction market.
- Jupiter Offerbook: A permissionless money market that allows users to borrow using any onchain asset, including all RWAs, with time-based P2P loans and no price-based liquidations.
Jupiter’s superapp approach aims to ensure that billions of potential users––from retail to institutions––can realize the benefits of onchain finance simply by using a single trusted application across multiple surfaces: web, mobile, and API.
About Jupiter
Jupiter is the global leader in onchain finance, building the infrastructure for an open financial future. With over $1 trillion in annual volume and the largest TVL on Solana, Jupiter delivers a unified onchain experience spanning spot, perpetuals, lending, staking, token creation, prediction markets, and mobile, with many more products to come.
About ParaFi Capital
ParaFi is a leading institutional investment firm focused on the digital asset ecosystem across public and private markets. Founded in 2018, ParaFi was among the earliest dedicated blockchain investors and has evolved into a trusted partner to leading global institutions. The Firm invests across the full stack of crypto capital markets, with investment and technology teams pursuing idiosyncratic opportunities and partnering with protocols and companies building real-world blockchain applications.
About Author
Disclaimer: The views, suggestions, and opinions expressed here are the sole responsibility of the experts. No Digi Observer journalist was involved in the writing and production of this article.
Press Release
William T. Bridge Introduces “The 3-Point Personal Security Standard” for Everyday Tech Users
-
William T. Bridge, an IT Support Specialist based in Sacramento, California, is urging individuals to adopt a simple three-part standard for safer accounts, devices, and data at home and at work.
California, US, 3rd February 2026, ZEX PR WIRE, William T. Bridge, an IT support specialist known for his calm, systems based approach to user support, announced a new personal standard today designed for everyday people who want fewer tech crises and safer online lives.
His “3-Point Personal Security Standard” focuses on three basics most people skip until something goes wrong:
-
Strong, unique passwords managed in a password manager
-
Multifactor authentication on all key accounts
-
At least one automatic backup for important files
Bridge developed the standard after years of watching the same preventable problems repeat across small businesses, clinics, nonprofits, and home networks. In his experience, simple habits often make the difference between a minor issue and a major disruption.
“In my day to day work, the worst incidents almost always start with the basics being ignored,” Bridge said. “A single reused password or one laptop with no backup can turn a small mistake into a week of stress.”
Research highlights how costly those basic gaps can be:
-
65 percent of people reuse passwords across multiple accounts.
-
An estimated 81 percent of hacking related breaches involve weak or stolen passwords.
-
Nearly 1 in 3 users have lost important files because they had no backup.
-
Small organizations hit by serious data loss sometimes shut down within months because recovery costs and downtime are too high.
“Most people think serious security problems only happen to big companies,” Bridge noted. “But I have seen families lose years of photos and small teams lose key documents because one hard drive failed or one mailbox got compromised.”
Bridge’s standard is built for regular users, not specialists. It focuses on a few clear moves that can be set up once and then maintained with small, regular check ins.
“When I help seniors at a community tech clinic or mentor high school students, I repeat the same message,” he explained. “If you protect your main accounts, turn on multifactor, and back up your files, you remove a big chunk of the risk from your life.”
The 3-Point Personal Security Standard
-
Use a password manager
-
Store all logins in one secure app.
-
Make passwords long and unique for each site.
-
-
Turn on multifactor authentication (MFA)
-
Start with email, banking, cloud storage, and social media.
-
Use an authenticator app whenever possible.
-
-
Set up automatic backups
-
Turn on cloud or external drive backups for documents and photos.
-
Check once a month that backups are running and restorable.
-
“People do not need to understand every technical detail,” Bridge said. “They just need a small personal standard that they follow every time they create an account or save something that matters.”
30-Day Implementation Plan
Week 1: Map and Prioritize
-
List your top 10 accounts that would hurt most if lost or hacked.
Examples: email, banking, payroll, tax, social media, cloud storage. -
Write down where your important files and photos live now.
-
Decide which password manager you will use.
-
Install the password manager on your phone and main computer.
Week 2: Lock Down Critical Accounts
-
Move the passwords for your top 10 accounts into the password manager.
-
Change each one to a long, unique password generated by the manager.
-
Turn on multifactor authentication for each of those 10 accounts.
-
Test MFA from both your phone and your main computer.
Week 3: Set Up Backups
-
Choose a backup method: cloud backup service or external drive.
-
Turn on automatic backup for your main computer.
-
Make sure documents, photos, and important work folders are included.
-
Run a test restore of one file to confirm it works.
Week 4: Extend and Review
-
Add 20 more logins into your password manager as you use them.
-
Turn on multifactor for any remaining high value accounts.
-
Create one short page of notes that explains your standard in plain language.
-
Share the standard with one friend, family member, or colleague and help them complete Week 1.
One-Page Personal Checklist
Accounts and Passwords
-
I use a password manager on my phone and main computer.
-
My email accounts use long, unique passwords.
-
My banking and financial accounts use long, unique passwords.
-
I do not reuse passwords between important accounts.
Multifactor Authentication
-
MFA is turned on for my main email.
-
MFA is turned on for my banking and financial accounts.
-
MFA is turned on for my main cloud storage service.
-
I use an authenticator app whenever a service supports it.
Backups
-
My main computer has automatic backups enabled.
-
My important documents are included in the backup.
-
My photos and personal media are included in the backup.
-
I have tested restoring at least one file from backup.
Review Habit
-
I have a reminder once a month to review this checklist.
-
I update any accounts that still use old or reused passwords.
-
I confirm that recent backups completed successfully.
“Anyone can adopt this standard in small steps,” Bridge concluded. “You do not need to become an expert. You just need to treat these basics as non negotiable, the same way you lock your front door at night.”
Bridge encourages individuals, families, and small teams to adopt the 3-Point Personal Security Standard over the next 30 days and to share the one-page checklist with at least one other person.
About William T. Bridge
William T. Bridge is an IT support specialist based in Sacramento, California. He has worked in managed services, healthcare, and nonprofit environments, with a focus on endpoint support, secure remote access, and practical documentation. He volunteers at community tech clinics, mentors high school students in basic networking and scripting, and promotes simple, repeatable habits that make everyday technology safer and more reliable.
About Author
Disclaimer: The views, suggestions, and opinions expressed here are the sole responsibility of the experts. No Digi Observer journalist was involved in the writing and production of this article.
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