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How to keep those old Facebook posts hidden (well, sort of).

Wednesday, December 10, 2014 13:19
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21st Century Wire says…

Sometimes curiosity can get the best of us – all of us. Back when Facebook started, no one thought anything of sharing information, photos, or their opinions, but years later, everyone seems cognizant of how their own posts can damage their reputation, or causes others embarrassment.

Here one way you can protect, or hide your online history from the casual prying eyes – of future employers, constituents (thinking of running for public office one day?), the media, professional competitors, or even your future dating partner…

The Switch

Facebook announced this week that it’s adding the ability to let you search for old posts on its network by using the search bar. The idea, the company said, is to be able to go back to posts you missed — to see your friend’s wedding pictures, say, or relive a super-funny moment on your last vacation. The feature is rolling out on iOS and desktop Web browsers over the next week.

 You’ve told us the most important thing is being able to find posts you’ve seen before, and now you can,” wrote Facebook’s Tom Stocky, its vice president of search. 

That’s all well and good, but Internet being what it is, that also means that the temptation will be almost overwhelming to search for embarrassing posts, like the time that you locked your keys in your running car. (Not that I speak from experience or anything.) And when new friends re-”like” or comment on those embarrassing incidents you might not want people to read again.

Oh dear.

You can’t completely opt out of search, but there are ways to keep old posts from resurfacing. To that end, this is also a good time to get reacquainted with Facebook’s privacy menu, so you can prevent posts from getting out to your employer or the general public. There are a couple of ways to do this.

One way is to take the broad approach and take the “Limit Old Posts” option. This feature changes every post you’ve ever made on your timeline to the “Friends” audience.

limitold

It’s not a particularly nuanced option, and doesn’t help if you’re friends with the people that you want to keep from seeing your posts. It also doesn’t help too much if you’ve already restricted the audience on a certain post to a more narrow audience than “Friends.” Use with caution.

For a more in-depth — if a bit tedious — approach, the best option is to use the “Activity Log.”

activitylog

That lets you go through every post you’ve made, chronologically, and determine whether you want it on your timeline, and which groups you’d like to be able to see it.

actlog2

From that page, you can get rid of items you don’t want on your timeline by unliking or hiding them, or change the privacy setting on your own posts to limit the audience…

Continue this story at The Switch

READ MORE SCI-TECH NEWS AT: 21st Century Wire Sci-Tech Files 

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21st Century Wire is an alternative news agency designed to enlighten, inform and educate readers about world events which are not always covered in the mainstream media.



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