I deleted my Google account. This site helps you do the same, at your own pace.

The first step-by-step guide to leaving Google service by service. 14 chapters, 320 pages.

Your digital diagnostic

Assess your dependency on big platforms and discover your privacy score.

Privacy-friendly alternatives

Discover services that respect your privacy, sorted by category and difficulty level.

Frequently asked questions

Why should I leave Google?

Google collects a massive amount of personal data: emails, GPS locations, searches, contacts, files… This data feeds a highly detailed advertising profile. Leaving Google means taking back control of your digital privacy.

Is it difficult to migrate?

Not if you take it step by step. Our book guides you through each service (Gmail, Drive, Photos, Maps…) with clear instructions and tested alternatives. Most migrations take less than an hour per service.

Are the alternatives as reliable as Google?

Yes, our catalog features 66 ethical services across 25 categories, including Proton Mail, Infomaniak, Signal, and Brave, each with a difficulty level, pros/cons, and migration guide. Many are open-source and independently audited.

Is my data safe on Vesio?

Absolutely. We don't collect any personal browsing data. Diagnostic results stay on your device, and downloads use time-limited secure links. Our anonymous analytics use Umami, an open-source tool hosted in Europe. The site is funded through a transparent affiliate program, detailed on our Transparency page. No ads, no data resale.

Is the diagnostic really free?

Yes, the diagnostic is 100% free. It takes about 3 minutes: 23 questions across 5 dimensions. You instantly get your autonomy score out of 100, a radar chart by dimension, and a list of detected GAFAM services, no signup needed. To unlock the full analysis (personalized risks, priorities, action plan, recommended chapters), we only ask for your email address. It's used to secure access to the free book chapters, and is never resold or shared.

Can I migrate gradually?

That's actually the recommended approach. Start with the easiest services to replace (browser, search engine), then move to more complex ones (email, cloud). Our book follows exactly this progressive logic.