............ Have a nice day............
USER MENU ID IS UNDEFINED IN FINACLE MIS SERVER   Date of Implementation of "VERY GOOD" Bench Mark for MACPs effect from 25.07.2016   Expected DA from Jan 2017 – 3% or 2% ?    One minute talk time for each Rupee in Airtel Payments Bank   AICPIN for October 2016 : Chances for 5% DA from January 2017   Central Government employees retiring from January 2017 to submit online application   Pre-Budget Views of Govt. Employees for inclusion in the Budget for the Year 2017-18: Confederation i.e. Scrap NPS, Minimum Wage Rs. 26,000 & Fitment Formula etc   On Salary Week, Banks Unlikely to Meet Demand for Extra 1 Lakh Cr   82 per cent ATMs dry because government used that money to pay its own employees   National Anthem Before Movie, Rules Supreme Court. Citizens 'Duty-Bound' To Show Respect    undefined

Tuesday, 17 February 2015

Facebook Now Lets You Choose Who Controls Your Account After You Die


                 Facebook Now Lets You Choose Who Controls Your Account After You Die

Facebook is putting its users in control of what happens to their accounts after they die. Starting today, users in the US will be able to chose to have their accounts deleted after death or grant another person on Facebook permission to manage an account on their behalf. Facebook calls this person an account’s “legacy contact,” and users will be able to choose that person through the website’s or app’s security page.
If you chose to set up a legacy contact, that person will be able to change your profile photo, accept friend requests, and pin announcements on your account’s timeline after Facebook receives notice of your death. A legacy contact won’t be able to post as the account that they’re controlling, nor will they be able to view that person’s private messages. Facebook will also provide an option to let legacy contacts download a file containing an account’s photos, posts, and other information.

Before today, Facebook provided a process to freeze accounts after death, but there was no way to set them up to be managed by someone else or automatically deleted. Facebook said last year that it was working on better ways to handle accounts after death — at the time, it started respecting users’ existing privacy settings and allowing “Look Back” compilation videos to be generated. Now, about a year later, it’s actually giving its users control. Setting up legacy choices is optional, and Facebook says that they’ll eventually roll out to other countries.

source: Yahoo

No comments:

Post a Comment