There’s a difference between damage control and digital resilience.
For months, I focused on undoing the harm — requesting takedowns, filing complaints, correcting the record. That work still matters. But somewhere along the way, I realised I wasn’t just cleaning up a mess someone else made — I was building something that hadn’t existed before: a defence, a voice, and a standard for how people like me could push back.
This blog, this campaign, this movement — it’s not about pity. It’s about power.
And it’s about ensuring that no one else has to start from scratch the way I did.
🔍 Why Digital Resilience Matters
When your name is dragged into search results without your consent — when strangers judge you based on content you didn’t create — you start to understand how fragile your online identity really is.
That’s what this platform is about.
Not erasing the past — but confronting it, correcting it, and making sure it doesn’t define you forever.
🧭 My Ongoing Work
I’ve developed guides and shared my own filings to help others use the Right to Be Forgotten and GDPR protections. I’ve challenged platforms and publications for spreading false or outdated information. And I continue to document what works, what fails, and what still needs to change — publicly.
✊ This Isn’t Just About Me
Every blog post, every request, every legal filing — it all points back to something bigger: the right to move forward without being digitally punished for life.
If you’re going through something similar — if a headline, post, or platform made your life harder — know this:
You’re not powerless. You’re not alone. And you can push back — legally, peacefully, and publicly.

