Digital Hygiene 101

Digital theft is no longer just a technology problem. It is a personal, financial, and workplace safety problem.

Today, a worker’s phone, email, passwords, and phone number are connected to almost everything that matters: payroll, banking, healthcare, benefits, identity, taxes, family accounts, and personal communication. If one of those access points is compromised, the damage can move fast.

This class teaches workers why digital security matters in real life, not in theory. Students will learn how digital theft actually happens, why criminals target everyday workers, and which accounts must be protected first.

The class keeps the message simple:

Your phone is your wallet now.
Your email resets everything.
Criminals usually trick people, not systems.
Workers are easy targets when they are rushed, tired, distracted, or trusting authority.

By the end of the class, students will understand the basic risks of digital theft and will identify the three most important things they need to protect: their email, their passwords, and their phone number.


What Will You Learn

You will learn how digital theft connects directly to their daily life, paycheck, identity, and personal security. The class explains the problem in plain language and gives workers a clear starting point for protecting themselves.

  • Your phone is no longer just a phone. It is connected to your bank account, payroll, email, healthcare, work apps, family accounts, and personal identity. If someone gets control of your phone or phone number, they may be able to access far more than your calls and text messages.

  • Your email is the reset button for your digital life. Most accounts use email to reset passwords, confirm identity, and recover access. If a criminal gets into your email, they may be able to take over your banking, payroll, shopping, social media, and work-related accounts.

  • Most criminals do not break into accounts like they do in the movies. They trick people into giving away passwords, clicking fake links, entering codes, or trusting messages that look official. The attack usually works because the person is rushed, distracted, scared, or trying to solve a problem quickly.

  • These attacks are common because they are simple and effective. Phishing tricks people into giving up information, reused passwords let criminals try the same login across many accounts, and phone number theft can help them receive security codes. Criminals use these methods because they do not need to beat the system if they can trick the person using it.

  • Workers are targeted because they are busy, predictable, and often under pressure. They are used to responding quickly to bosses, payroll notices, benefit updates, delivery alerts, and official-looking messages. Criminals know that a tired or rushed worker is more likely to click first and question later.

  • Every worker has a few accounts that would create serious problems if they were stolen. These usually include email, banking, payroll, phone carrier, healthcare, retirement, and tax-related accounts. This class helps students identify their most important accounts so they know what to protect first.

  • Digital hygiene starts with the basics because the basics control everything else. Email resets accounts, passwords open accounts, and phone numbers are often used to prove identity. If those three areas are weak, the rest of a person’s digital life is exposed.