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Settings

Anonomi settings are not cosmetic preferences.
They control how visible you are, how the app behaves under pressure, and what happens when things go wrong.

Before using Anonomi in a real situation, you should understand what each settings category does — and when it matters.


Most apps assume:

  • Stable internet
  • Trusted devices
  • No physical access by adversaries

Anonomi assumes the opposite.

Settings exist to help you:

  • Reduce metadata exposure
  • Control network behavior
  • Limit damage if your device is seized
  • Adapt to different risk environments

You don’t need to enable everything.
You need to enable what matches your situation.


Control how the app looks and behaves visually.

  • Language & region
  • Theme (light / dark / system)

These settings don’t affect security directly, but they matter for usability under stress.

Display settings


Control when and how Anonomi uses the network.

This includes:

  • Tor connectivity
  • Bridge usage
  • Internet vs offline operation
  • Battery and data constraints

This is one of the most important areas to review before high-risk use.

Connections


Controls what happens when someone else touches your device.

This includes:

  • App lock
  • Password changes
  • Panic button
  • Stealth mode

If you expect device inspection, coercion, or confiscation, review these first.

Security settings


Controls what Anonomi reveals outside the app.

Notifications can leak:

  • Who you’re talking to
  • When messages arrive
  • Whether the app is in use

Adjust these carefully depending on your environment.

Notification settings


Some features have their own configuration pages:

These settings only appear if you use the feature.


You should review settings:

  • After installation
  • Before entering a high-risk environment
  • When changing countries or networks
  • After a device update
  • After adding new contacts

Settings are part of your operational posture — not a one-time setup.