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27/11/2016
How to DELETE yourself from the internet: Website erases your online existence with the click of a button
• Deseat.me lets people sign in through their Google accounts
• It then brings back all of the accounts they have listed online
• Delete links are provided for each so users can expunge their records
• It lists everything from Facebook to YouTube and Evernote
If you ever feel like online life is getting too much, there may be a solution.
A Swedish website is offering anyone the chance to erase their online footprint with the click of a button.
You simply have email address and password, and then they can remove any and all traces linked to that address.
The service, called Deseat.me, has been designed by Swedish programmers Wille Dahlbo and Linus Unnebäck.
By letting users sign in with Google, it seeks out all of the accounts a user has created online.
Using Google’s OAuth protocol to access users’ data, it then provides them with delete links for each of their accounts, enabling the user to wipe the slate clean.
Examples given on the website include Facebook, Evernote and Dribble, but would include everything from YouTube to LinkedIn.
The site claims: ‘We give you a list of all the accounts and services you have ever created an account for.
‘We match them with direct links to their delete page, and instructions on how to delete your account for good.’
The Swedish duo write: ‘Basically the only thing you're telling us is what accounts you want to delete.
‘That’s it, and since we use Google's OAuth protocol we don't have access to any of your login information.’
However, for users with a lot of accounts it could take quite a few clicks to wipe out their online presence.
Deseat.me are appears to be fairly limited at the moment.
It requires users to have a Google email address that is used for all of their online accounts.
This means that old MySpace accounts, for instance, will be missed.
CAN YOU DELETE YOUR ONLINE EXISTENCE?
Just because your accounts are gone, does not necessarily mean you will become a ghost online.
In the case of social media, while your profile may be deleted, there could still be records of your likes, shares and reposts in other people's profiles.
Many services, including Google, provide a grace period, where users can change their mind and reactivate an account.
11/09/2016
Could wireless headphones HARM your health? Public health professor warns radiation of AirPods are just as bad
• Apple's new iPhone will come with Bluetooth-powered wireless earbuds
• Dr Joel Moskowitz of UC Berkeley cites research slamming Bluetooth
• He warns even low frequency emissions break down blood-brain barrier
• Powered by Bluetooth technology, the AirPods transmit low-intensity radiowaves into your ears.
• And research shows that over time these emissions wear down the blood-brain barrier, which is essential for keeping out chemical toxins.
• 'We are playing with fire here,' Dr Joel Moskowitz, a professor at the UC Berekely School of Public Health
You are putting a microwave-emitting device next to your brain.'
The exact frequency of the AirPod Bluetooth emission has not yet been released.
Apple's engineers and marketing directors insist that, since they use Bluetooth, the microwave emissions are well within the FCC guidelines. Bluetooth emissions are far weaker than, for example, microwave oven radiation.
Moskowitz warns that more than 200 scientists who study the effects of electromagnetic fields believe that the FCC guidelines are inadequate to protect human health.
And Dr Leif Salford, the world's top researcher in the field of cell phone radiation, recently claimed your cell phone could be more harmful a few inches from your head (using loudspeaker) than when you have it fixed to your ear (for a phone call).
The findings are nothing new, Dr Moskowitz explains.
'This has been observed over several decades,' he says.
'It's like we keep rediscovering that Bluetooth is harmful and trying to forget it because we don't know how to handle it from a policy standpoint.
'Although we don’t know the long-term risks from using Bluetooth devices, why would anyone insert microwave-emitting devices in their ears near their brain when there are safer ways to use a cell phone?
'Essentially I recommend using corded headsets or hands-free use of cell phones, not wireless ear buds.'
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