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Operational security basics

Anonomi is designed to reduce technical exposure.
Operational security (OPSEC) is about reducing human mistakes.

No app can make unsafe behavior safe. This page explains how to use Anonomi in ways that don’t undermine its design.


Operational security is not about paranoia or perfection.

It’s about:

  • choosing when to communicate
  • choosing how to connect
  • understanding what the app does not protect

Anonomi gives you options. OPSEC is how you use them.


If your device is compromised, Anonomi cannot protect you.

Assume risk if:

  • Your phone is rooted, jailbroken, or running unknown software
  • Someone else has had unsupervised access to it
  • The operating system is outdated or modified
  • The device can be seized or inspected

Basic discipline

  • Use a device lock (PIN, password, or biometric)
  • Keep physical control of your device
  • Treat lost or seized devices as compromised

Contacts are not permanent trust relationships.

Even without real names:

  • Writing style
  • Time patterns
  • Voice characteristics
  • Profile images

…can link identities over time.

Good practice

  • Avoid reusing names, photos, or phrases across platforms
  • Don’t assume contacts remain safe forever
  • Remove contacts that no longer need access

Anonomi supports multiple connection modes because no single mode is always safe.

Before communicating, decide:

  • Is the internet usable but risky?
  • Or is the internet itself the threat?

Rule of thumb

  • Internet usable → Tor
  • Internet dangerous → Offline modes

Don’t “just try online” out of habit.

See:


Messages can outlive context.

Even encrypted messages can:

  • be shown under coercion
  • be misinterpreted later
  • resurface when devices are compromised

Safer habits

  • Keep messages short and specific
  • Avoid unnecessary context
  • Don’t send anything you wouldn’t carry physically

Silence is often safer than clarification.


Features reduce risk — they don’t remove it

Section titled “Features reduce risk — they don’t remove it”

Security features are risk reduction tools, not guarantees.

  • Panic button helps under pressure, but may not erase everything instantly
  • Stealth mode hides the app, not its existence
  • Voice distortion reduces recognition risk, not identity certainty
  • Offline modes reduce network exposure, not device exposure

Use features intentionally, not as a safety net.


Design your behavior for:

  • stress
  • fatigue
  • time pressure
  • mistakes

Avoid plans that only work when everything goes right.

Good defaults

  • Prepare settings in advance
  • Keep fallback options
  • Know when not to communicate

If something feels unsafe:

  • Pause
  • Go offline
  • Say less
  • Delay sending

You don’t need perfect certainty to choose caution.


OPSEC is not about doing everything — it’s about avoiding the most common mistakes.