cody rhodes
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An error occurred while saving the comment cody rhodes supported this idea ·
I strongly agree with this perspective. Introducing privacy-focused and independent infrastructure at an early educational stage can shape a much healthier digital mindset for students.
Alongside secure email and cloud services, it’s also important to support learning with independent, web-based educational tools that don’t rely on large data-harvesting ecosystems. For example, tools like TI-84 Calculator Online
allow students to practice math, graph equations, and learn problem-solving directly in the browser without accounts, tracking, or proprietary software.
Combining privacy-first platforms like Proton with open, accessible learning tools can help governments and educational institutions promote cybersecurity awareness, digital independence, and better learning habits from the very beginning.