Archive for August 2014

Here’s a free service that deletes your tweets

Hey, what if we were to tell you that now there’s a service that allows you to delete most of your tweets from Twitter? Great news, eh?

TweetDelete is useful for people who want to reduce the amount of old data in their Twitter account or those who want to limit the amount of data about themselves they expose Online. It is an automated service & runs on your account every few days. Once you’ve activated TweetDelete, it will check your account periodically for new tweets that have become older than the age you specified and it will delete them for you. You are free to disable TweetDelete at any time.

how to delete tweets

For technical reasons TweetDelete can only work within the latest 3,200 tweets on your account. Tweets older than this are not easily accessible via Twitter’s interface & since TweetDelete cannot find them, those beyond that cannot be deleted. An example: if your account originally had 15,000 tweets & you delete 3,200 of them, you’ll still have 11,800 left. These old tweets don’t show up on Twitter’s Site though, claims TweetDelete, simply because that’s how Twitter works.Once you’ve activated TweetDelete, provided you make less than 3,200 posts per the deletion timeframe you’ve selected, all future posts should be deleted as you’d expect.

Twitter allows apps to request 1 of 3 types of access to your account – read, read+write or read+write+direct messages. Once you have used the free TweetDelete & do not want it anymore, you may revoke all permissions granted to it. Once that’s done, it’s impossible for these guys to delete your tweets.

But remember, all deletion is final. Once you have ordered TweetDelete to do its job, deleted tweets cannot be recovered. TweetDelete doesn’t store copies of your tweets, it only deletes them. There’s no way to get them back once they’ve been deleted.

This new service is part of the UK-based MEMSET network of dedicated servers.

 

Image Credit: TweetDelete

 

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Google to set up its famous “campuses” for entrepreneurs in Seoul, 1st in Asia

Google campus Seoul

Google has announced it will be setting up 1 of its famous campuses for entrepreneurs in Seoul, South Korea. This will be Google’s 1st such space in Asia.

The announcement was made on the Google Asia Pacific blog. Campuses are Google’s spaces for entrepreneurs to “learn, connect and build companies that will change the world.” Here, entrepreneurs get access to mentorship & training, led by their local startup community, experienced entrepreneurs, & teams from Google.

Campus Seoul will be home to many new programs, including Campus for Moms, CampusEDU & Office Hours with Googler mentors. Entrepreneurs at Campus Seoul will also have access to global opportunities, including an exchange program to other Campus locations.

Campus Seoul will be joining a global network including Campus London, Campus Tel Aviv, & the recently announced Campus Warsaw & Campus Sao Paulo. It will also join the Google for Entrepreneurs network of dozens of startup communities which will now offer Korean entrepreneurs connections to major startup hubs globally.

Through the Google for Entrepreneurs program, Google has helped young Korean companies through a host of programs & partnerships including the annual Global K-Startup program, KStartup Accelerator, Startup Weekend, Startup Grind, & this November, Startup Nations.

 

Image Credit: Google Campuses

 

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