Who Owns Your Social Media Content: How to Mass Delete Tumblr Posts, Tweets, Facebook Photos, and More
If you are a semi-active user of any social media site, you are likely to contribute content there on a regular basis. But how easy is it to mass-delete that content? What if it backfires? How much control do we have over our own social media updates?
In other words, who owns your social media content and how easy is it to mass delete Tumblr posts, tweets, Facebook photos and updates, Yelp reviews, Quora answers, posts on Reddit, etc.?
Is it possible to quickly erase or hide your online identity in case anything goes wrong?
The answer to that is: Not quite, sadly. While all social media sites confirm that you are the only owner of the content you put on the web, hiding it from a public eye may take days of work and sometimes it’s not doable at all.
All social media sites work slightly differently when it comes to giving you control over your updates. This chart will give you a better idea of all kinds of hurdles you may face when trying to mass-delete your social media posts.
How to Mass-Delete Social Media Content You Own:
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