Tails on the Go
- Moudiongui Martin
- Jul 26
- 2 min read
Holla amigos,
I’ve got nothing to hide, but if I ever needed to do something sensitive online, I’d fire up Tails without a second thought.
Today I’ll show you what Tails OS is and how to create a live USB so you can launch it anywhere, anytime.
Personally, I always carry a Tails stick in my bag, ready to go.
What exactly is Tails?
Tails (The Amnesic Incognito Live System) is a privacy‑focused Linux‑based operating system designed to protect your anonymity.
Unlike Windows or macOS, you don’t install Tails on your hard drive. It only runs live from a USB stick or DVD. When you power the machine down, everything vanishes : no traces, no history, nothing. Next boot, your normal OS comes back as if nothing happened.
Why is Tails ultra‑secure?
🔒 Everything goes through the Tor network – every connection is encrypted and anonymized. Your real IP never hits the internet.
🧠 No local traces – by default, nothing is written to disk. Even RAM is wiped on shutdown.
🧱 App isolation – each application lives in its own sandbox. If one gets popped, it can’t infect the rest.
🔐 Encrypted persistent storage (optional) – you can enable an encrypted partition on the stick to keep files or settings. Totally locked down.
How to install Tails on a USB stick
🧩 Step 1: Download Tails
Go to the official site: https://tails.net
Grab the latest .img or .iso.
(Optional) Check the hash to be sure the file is clean.

🔧 Step 2: Create the bootable USB
You’ll need:
A USB stick with at least 8 GB
A working computer (Linux, Windows, or macOS)
➤ On Windows, macOS, or Linux
Install Balena Etcher (https://balena.io/etcher), Rufus (https://rufus.ie/en/), or any boot‑media tool you like.
Plug in your USB stick.
Select the Tails image, choose the stick, and flash it.

⚙️ Step 3: Boot from the USB
Reboot with the stick inserted.
Hit your boot menu key (F12, Esc, F2, Del, etc.).
Pick the USB drive as the boot device.
Tails starts up.

Using Tails day‑to‑day
Once Tails is running:
You land on a clean GNOME desktop.
Open the Tor Browser for anonymous surfing.
Built‑in tools include:
Thunderbird + GPG for encrypted email
KeePassXC for password storage
OnionShare for P2P file sharing over Tor
LibreOffice, VLC, GIMP, and more

Who’s Tails for?
Journalists, activists, whistle‑blowers
Travelers in high‑surveillance countries
You, me, and anyone who wants to leave zero footprints
Honestly, even for basic private searches, it’s a slick, fast plan B to have on hand.



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