explaingit

lissy93/awesome-privacy

9,367AstroAudience · generalComplexity · 1/5Setup · easy

TLDR

A curated list of privacy-respecting software and services across dozens of categories, covering alternatives to mainstream apps that collect user data.

Mindmap

mindmap
  root((Awesome Privacy))
    What it does
      Curated resource list
      Privacy alternatives
    Categories
      Browsers
      Email
      Messaging
      Storage
    Tech
      Astro
      Markdown
    Audience
      Privacy-focused users
      Self-hosters
Click or tap to explore — scroll the page freely

Code map

Detail Auto

An interactive map of this repo's files and how they connect — its source is parsed live in your browser. Click Visualize to build it.

filefunction / class

Things people build with this

USE CASE 1

Find a privacy-respecting alternative to a mainstream app or service you currently use.

USE CASE 2

Build a self-hosted setup using tools from the list to avoid relying on commercial cloud services.

USE CASE 3

Research the privacy landscape of a specific software category like email, browsers, or messaging.

Tech stack

AstroMarkdown

Getting it running

Difficulty · easy Time to first run · 5min

In plain English

Awesome Privacy is a curated collection of software and online services that prioritize user privacy and security. It falls into the "awesome list" category of GitHub repositories, where community members compile and maintain a reference guide around a specific topic. This one focuses on alternatives to mainstream tools that collect user data, offering privacy-respecting options across many categories. The topic tags confirm the scope: awesome, awesome-list, privacy, security, self-hosted, and software. The self-hosted tag is notable: many entries in such a list are tools you can run on your own server rather than trusting a third-party service with your information. Practical categories covered in this kind of list typically include web browsers, search engines, email services, password managers, messaging apps, cloud storage, and operating system choices. The goal is to give people who care about digital privacy a structured reference for replacing services that track or monetize their activity. The repository is built using Astro, a web framework for generating static sites. This means the list is published as a browsable website rather than a plain Markdown file on GitHub, making it more accessible to people who want to explore the recommendations without navigating raw text. With over 9,300 stars, the repository has attracted a large audience among people interested in digital security, privacy, and self-hosting their own services. For anyone beginning to think about online privacy and wanting a broad, community-vetted starting point, this list provides a well-organized overview of available options.

Copy-paste prompts

Prompt 1
From the awesome-privacy list, what are the top recommended alternatives to Gmail for privacy-focused email?
Prompt 2
What self-hosted options does the awesome-privacy list for cloud file storage, and how do they compare?
Prompt 3
How do I use the awesome-privacy list to audit my current software setup and find where I am exposing the most data?
Open on GitHub → Explain another repo

← lissy93 on gitmyhub — every repo by this author, as a profile.

Verify against the repo before relying on details.