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Is Linux safe to write and save stories on?

I just want to write stories again and haven't been able to at all since 2025 due to...2025 and all that has entailed. I no longer feel safe or secure using any of my current devices. I feel surveyed and watched 24/7. I'm absolutely not okay with things as they are currently. (.-.) For more context, I have pre-existing mental disorders and this year has just done me in.

I'm striving toward switching out at least one device with something that I can install linux on. I was thinking either a lenovo or a dell, and will start probably with linux mint, they say it's a good beginner distro.

Not being able to write is killing me. I love writing so much even though it's not anything special. It just felt good.

I've never used linux but want to learn and I will learn, because you have to if you want to use it. You can't just hop in a car and hope it will work without knowing how to drive it. I will learn the commands. I'll fail at it a couple times but learn. It'll be great. Bring it.

I appreciate you taking time to reply.

Edit: You guys are amazing. My hope for the future is restored. Thank you!

45 comments
  • Any of the big distros from North America/Europe/Africa/Australia/Japan should be trustworthy. I don’t know about the Chinese/Russian distros (I’ve never tried them, and have no desire to). The smaller distros and hobby project distros may be safe, but haven’t proven it imho.

    There’s nothing in a default Linux distro that will share anything in your disk with anyone. If you enable crash reporting or telemetry, system crashes and/or system specs will be shared with the distro’s devs. You should just disable them.

    If you enable any sort of online account syncing (like Google Drive), then certain things will be shared with the account provider. If you want to be absolutely secure, don’t enable these things.

    When you install something through Flatpaks, their permissions are shown to you in the installer. By default, they only have access to files you choose through the file picker, unless they have the full disk access permission. And by default, you can only successfully pick files from your Downloads folder. So, for something like VS Code, it can access your whole disk, but for something like Discord, the file has to be in your Downloads directory and you have to pick it before Discord can access it.

    You should make sure you’re using Wayland, because it has strict permissions for how apps can access your screen (you have to pick an app or screen before it can see it). On X11/X.org, every app has full access to see your entire screen and all your keyboard/mouse input.

    Don’t use Wine, Proton, or AppImages if you’re worried about safety, because apps running in those systems haven’t been verified and have full access to all of your files. Stick to your Distro’s software installation app. Flatpaks and Snaps are generally safe.

    So, after all of that, these are the distros I would recommend, in order of my recommendation:

    • Fedora
    • Mint
    • Pop OS
    • Ubuntu
    • Debian
    • OpenSUSE
    • Arch

    (My order is not based solely on how trustworthy an OS is, but also how friendly it is to beginners.)

    Only install the official versions from the official source. (No community “spins”.)

    Either Gnome, KDE, or Cinnamon would be great for you, so just try each of them out and see which one you like. I personally use both Gnome and KDE on different systems.

    I’ve been using Linux since 2008, and I’ve gone through several distros. Linux is a lot safer and more private than Windows. There’s huge community backlash when distros introduce anything that compromises user privacy.

  • I'm a little late to the party, I've written and edited four books, plus numerous short stories on Linux mint. Libreoffice does the job just fine, as others already mentioned.

    The great thing about starting out is that it's pretty easy to try whatever distributions you want, piddle around a little, and choose what you like best. You're leaning towards mint, and that's actually what I use, and have used.

    It's also a great beginner's distro because it's essentially plug and play. You install, open up, and you can jump right into basic activities with minimum effort. Which means that the Linux learning curve is much lighter than you'd think because you'll be working while you learn.

    No bullshit, my mom transitioned to mint in one day. Only hurdles were installing chrome, because that's what she likes, and the five hours she took tweaking the theme. She's a low needs user: browser, email, pictures. Her PC was choking on Windows 10 after the "upgrade" years ago, and wanted to try something else just for the hell of it. Now she does her own updates, doesn't even bother to call me.

    As a side note, I feel you. The last few years have been brutal. We're all feeling some degree of stress from it, but those of us with preexisting issues end up a notch higher than we should be. It ain't easy, but none of us are really alone in the struggle.

  • In a pure technical standpoint, directly answering your question: yes, Linux is a free and open source kernel, and most(looking at you Ubuntu.... Damn you) Linux distros are privacy respecting, so it is a good choice.

    Going a bit more beyond: it depends. Do you want full privacy? Or just peace from Windows?

    If you want peace from Windows, yeah, Linux is a big step-up, but it works and once you get the hang of it, it's a bit hard to go back.

    If you want privacy, just switching to Linux will help, but not solve. That's a entire separate journey you'll have to take alongside your Linux escapade.

    What softwares do you use? What services do you use?

    If you use Microsoft Office, you'll have to switch as that both doesn't exist in Linux, but also is kept by Microsoft which.... You know how Windows is.

    If you use Google anything, you gotta seek to de-google. Replace Google Docs with Nextcloud, replace Google with some other search engine, switch to a privacy respecting browser, etc.

    Do you use some password manager? How safe are those? And what accounts do you have? What's your mail provider?

    There are thousands of little questions you'll have to make yourself about what you use and what you do. And then, privacy nowadays sadly is a balance.

    The more privacy you have, the more convoluted and less practical it ends up being. Setting up and using something like KeePassXC is a lot less practical than just hitting save in Google Chrome to save into your Google account.

    Full 100% privacy isn't feasible for a normal person, and that's okay. The small percentage that "leaks" out is so small, it gets lost in the bulk collecting of data. At one point you'll need to figure out how much convenience and practicality you want to give up on for privacy.

    And without loosing much of it, having just a few small tweaks, boy you can go far. I have de-googled completely, switched 99% of my services and softwares to privacy ones, even rock Alpine Linux. And it still feels extremely practical and easy for me. You just gotta weight and figure out what works for you.

    EDIT: cuz my wording was a bit off, this isn't to discourage you, by opposite. It is more of a informative for you to study exactly your use case and how you want your privacy to be. Privacy is subjective and depends on the context, so there's a bit of homework involved with it

  • Once you get a little more comfortable with Linux, there’s some cool things you can do, such as convert an old laptop into a 100% pure writing-only device using a couple pieces of software, a simple startup script, and a barebones Debian installation. One such project has been created to help automate that process: tinkerwriterdeck What’s cool about something like this is that it doesn’t have a typical desktop experience, it’s exclusively used for writing and nothing else. Use a USB drive to save / load files, and it becomes a modern typewriter appliance with no internet to distract.

    • Holy crap, I'm sorry if I sound over-enthused but that is genuinely awesome to hear. I didn't know this either. I'm learning a ton here. I'm saving this information. This is something I would absolutely love to do.

      I wanted a word processor so badly that I got an alphasmart neo word processor 2 this year. It's great. However, I would prefer if I could write on something more familiar. Turning a laptop into a writer's deck would be amazing.

      I've watched videos of people build their own writer's decks. They were small computers though but it was really cool. And I have also seen a video where a guy took an old macbook and overhauled it so that it was all new hardware and only ran linux. It was incredible stuff. I want to try that myself as I do also have an old macbook just sitting untouched and I actually kind of love that old thing. It was great and seems like a shame to have to toss it. So it's definitely something I dream of doing one day. Only thing is I cannot for the life of me access tools to open up a computer. I tried looking on ifixit but they don't have all the tools needed. So, it will be a slow journey to get to that but I look forward to tinkering.

45 comments