How to protect his sextos?

If you are looking for the best escorts in your area, or if you have already found what suits you, you surely want to fully experience the “relationship”. So it's perfectly normal for you to try all kinds of new things, whether under the duvet or outside. Inevitably, spicing up a sex life already a little contaminated by routine seems difficult... But in reality, it's very simple. You just need to do new things! On the internet, you have an endless source of content to help you find a new way to raise the level between you and your conquest. Sexting is one of the most common means of achieving your ends: fast, exciting, surprising, and a little taboo, it is one of the most fashionable processes at the moment. However, sexting is not without danger… In fact, it is rather very risky. We explain everything to you in the rest of this article.

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Context

People who have never sexted are clearly an endangered species. Let anyone who has never sent a sext cast the first stone… But in fact, it's (almost) everyone who has already tried, or even who continues. As a couple, with a Lille escort, or simply with a sex-friend type relationship, small messages classified as adults are widely used. Whether in seduction or in “recovery”, in conquest and in the reconquest. With words, slightly lecherous allusions, saucy puns… But also with evocative photos… And others that leave a little less room for the imagination. And that's why it can become dangerous: in the wrong hands, a leak quickly arrived. And even worse, imagine: you send your photos to Grandma… Family meals will never have the same atmosphere again. We are (obviously) trying to prevent sexts that show our intimacy from ending up in the public square. Normal: digital is a bit cloudy, a bit fuzzy. And we are often afraid that there is no guarantee of confidentiality… And very often, it is true: there is none. So what do I do if I want my sexts to be protected so that I don't risk ending up naked on the internet?

Avoid identifying details

This is really the most logical principle of all. If you do not want to be recognized in a possible leak, or leak, you do not put your face in the photo. You avoid at all costs showing those little details that will betray you: moles next to the navel, piercings on the body, tattoos (even more those). So much for the obvious side of this advice, but stay! There is also your interior decoration: the painting behind you, is it recognizable? The bed frame too? So either you blur everything a bit, or you take your little pictures in a hotel bathroom, and without any identifying details of your body to you.

Delete metadata

Here's the most general yet underrated tip of all: metadata. Most of the digital photos you send actually contain metadata, including the GPS coordinates of where the photo was taken, the date and time of the shot, the brand and model of the camera, etc. You can disable the camera of your iPhone (if you have one) for example, so that it does not save the geographical data of your photos. There are also apps like ViewExif to view and remove metadata from your phone. If that's not possible, you just have to use your computer. And be careful: here we enter the “internet hacker” phase... Or not. Connect your phone to your computer. On Windows, once your naughty photos are displayed on your computer (be careful to be alone), right-click on the image file, then click on “properties”, then “details”. Finally, look for the “remove properties and personal information” link. This link removes the metadata, thus making your photos free of any compromising elements. For a Mac, on the other hand, you need OS X Yosemite, to delete Geodata without the help of paid software or which is not already integrated into your computer. Once the photo is displayed in Preview, select “Tools” and “Show Inspector”. Then click the information icon (i) to display the information panel. Next, click on the GPS tab to “Delete location information”. then click on “properties”, then “details”. Finally, look for the “remove properties and personal information” link. This link removes the metadata, thus making your photos free of any compromising elements. For a Mac, on the other hand, you need OS X Yosemite, to delete Geodata without the help of paid software or which is not already integrated into your computer. Once the photo is displayed in Preview, select “Tools” and “Show Inspector”. Then click the information icon (i) to display the information panel. Next, click on the GPS tab to “Delete location information”. then click on “properties”, then “details”. Finally, look for the “remove properties and personal information” link. This link removes the metadata, thus making your photos free of any compromising elements. For a Mac, on the other hand, you need OS X Yosemite, to delete Geodata without the help of paid software or which is not already integrated into your computer. Once the photo is displayed in Preview, select “Tools” and “Show Inspector”. Then click the information icon (i) to display the information panel. Next, click on the GPS tab to “Delete location information”. thus making your photos free of any compromising elements. For a Mac, on the other hand, you need OS X Yosemite, to delete Geodata without the help of paid software or which is not already integrated into your computer. Once the photo is displayed in Preview, select “Tools” and “Show Inspector”. Then click the information icon (i) to display the information panel. Next, click on the GPS tab to “Delete location information”. thus making your photos free of any compromising elements. For a Mac on the other hand, you need OS X Yosemite, to delete Geodata without the help of paid software or which is not already integrated into your computer. Once the photo is displayed in Preview, select “Tools” and “Show Inspector”. Then click the information icon (i) to display the information panel. Next, click on the GPS tab to “Delete location information”.

sexts that show our intimacy

People's obsession: the Cloud

Often, I admit that on iPhone and/or Mac, it's a bit of a recurrent fear of people. “Yeah, but what if I send you the photo, have the cloud save it, and someone hacks it?”. It's actually enough to make your photos used for sexting inaccessible to hackers. On your iPhone, you actually have the choice to check the “automatic synchronization” of images/photos with iCloud. Simply uncheck it. You don't need to do this all the time, but make sure to keep it off during your photoshoots. If you want to keep your nude photos, it may be wise to keep them on an external hard drive for example, rather than on iCloud, Google Drive, etc…

The Perfect Crime: Destroying Evidence

At the end of the day, that's what keeps you most secure: the destruction of evidence. Once your crime is committed, it is much easier to destroy the evidence, rather than letting your compromising photos fall into the hands of some hacker or a curious malicious person. The clever little reflex: ask your partner to do the same, removing the photo. Or the pictures.

Sexting at work

Well, if you work in a company that uses a lot of computers (so basically: everyone), you have the risk that your photos end up in the Cloud of the company. And you also have the risk of being surprised, and of being fired... So, even if it's tempting: abstain. Wait until you're away from work, to sext!

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