Michael Bazzell's Extreme Privacy is the first place that anybody with a serious interest in privacy should turn. As he has done in past editions, Bazzell presents a complete guide to self-anonymization – one that goes far beyond the normal steps of removing one's name and contact information from Google steps. In fact, this volume goes far beyond the digital world itself, going to great lengths to detail how to purchase even large assets anonymously, including homes and vehicles.
Bazzell's writing is clear and clean – much better than in previous editions of this work. His instructions are up-to-date and easy to follow. It's not always entirely clear what impact certain steps will have, however, nor is it always all that easy to understand why certain steps and precautions are necessary. Even recommendations as common as purchasing computers that lack the Intel Management Engine are thrown out almost casually, missing the contextual discussion that shows why this is a step that ought to be seriously considered.
Bazzell goes to privacy-minded extremes that are far beyond what I will ever be willing to consider. Setting up your own personal home firewall that is designed to shut off all internet access that does not connect through a VPN is a pretty extreme step, for example. Changing one's residence to a state that allows a ghost address to be used to establish residency seems to be a step beyond extreme. Abandoning any sort of stable residence and spending the rest of one's nomadic existence in an RV borders on the ludicrous. While reading this book, you will also likely find that the costs of complete privacy negate whatever marginal benefit you obtain – unless, of course, your life is actually in danger.
Of course, it is a sad comment on the state of modern society that such measures are even necessary. One wonders about the actual legitimacy of the infamous "penumbra of the Constitution" when its realization requires a lifetime of devotion and study. Certainly, it is true that the unending desire for complete anonymity is a quixotic quest just as costly and foolish as the state's insatiable hunger for security. At the same time, though, one wonders whether we really benefit from an economic system that feeds on our own metadata.