About [Org Name]

Who writes this

[Author Name] is a writer and researcher based in [City, ST]. Before starting [Org Name], [he/she/they] spent [X] years working in [relevant field — e.g., consumer technology education, public library digital services, community journalism]. The job was explaining technology to people who needed it to work but didn't want to study it, and that's still the job here.

[Author Name] can be reached at hello@[domain].

What this is

[Org Name] publishes guides and short quizzes about staying comfortable online. The target reader is someone who uses a computer or phone every day, finds occasional things confusing or annoying, and would like clear answers without having to wade through marketing copy or technical documentation.

We try to write the way a patient, knowledgeable neighbor would explain something over the back fence — direct, without jargon, without making you feel like you should have known this already.

Why we do this

A lot of online advice about staying safe and comfortable on the internet is written to sell something, or to create enough worry that you'll keep reading. We think most people are doing fine and could be doing a bit better with two or three specific changes. We try to say what those changes are and why they help, then get out of the way.

Articles sometimes mention categories of products — an ad blocker, a password tool — when they're genuinely the simplest solution to something. When they do, we link to comparison pages that show several options, not a single sponsored pick. We don't take payment to recommend specific products.

How the quizzes work

The quizzes are designed to find the two things most likely to make a real difference for your particular situation. There's no score, no percentage, no judgment about how you've been handling things. The output is two specific, plain-English steps you can take today, or set aside for later. Email is always optional.