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escapefromstress

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Mar 15, 2012
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This article might be helpful for some people:

Delete yourself from the internet by pressing this one button

Thanks to the immense contribution of internet technology to communication and information sharing that has made modern life much easier and more convenient. However, on the flipside, there are chances of your personal information being at risk or computer being exposed to the risk of virus making you think to leave internet. Is it possible to leave the internet and remove your online presence?

Developers in Sweden have created a website that can help you delete your online presence with just a few clicks. Swedish developers Wille Dahlbo and Linus Unnebäck created Deseat.me that uses Google’s security protocol to remove your entire web presence clean. The program runs on your computer, and not on the website’s servers to maximise privacy at all times.

“Privacy and data security is something we regard as extremely important,” explain the team behind the site.

“In fact, it’s our number one focus from beginning to end. That’s why we built it to run on your computer. So basically the only thing you’re telling us is what accounts you want to delete. Thats it, and since we use Google’s OAuth protocol we don’t have access to any of your login information.”

In simple words, you just need to add your email address and password, and you can remove any and all traces linked to that address with the click of a button. That means no more Gmail, Netflix, Facebook, Twitter, Snapchat, Ebay, Amazon or any of it . However, currently, the site is only deleting the information linked to email address, which is only Gmail.

So, how does it works? All you have to do is log in with a Google account, and the programme scans for any apps or services that you have created accounts for, and creates a list of them with easy delete links. For every account, it finds the programme gives you a ‘delete’ link, which takes you to that service’s unsubscribe page. It probably takes a few clicks per account to delete, and depending on how long you need to work through the entire list, you can be account-less within the hour.

https://www.techworm.net/2016/11/pre...-internet.html
 

DouMan

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Jul 5, 2008
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reply with quote?

Since we've come back online I can no longer use "reply with quote".
When I try all I get is a dotted circle that keeps going round and round.
Anyone else have this problem?
 

jalimon

I am addicted member
Dec 28, 2015
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if you click back a secound later it wotks. I lost all line break on my side in post.cheers,
 

DouMan

R E S P E C T
Jul 5, 2008
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if you click back a secound later it wotks. I lost all line break on my side in post.cheers,

Well I'll be ..... your perfectly right dude, thanks
 

lady_lover

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Feb 16, 2011
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Basic internet security...if a company like Yahoo who has decent financial resources can get hacked, and Ashley Madison as well, a hobby based site like Merb is far from immune.

First thing: Do you use an email for this site that is in any way linked to your personal email? The one you use for work or family and friends?

Second, is your password for this site the same as any other password you use for other sites?

Given a yes to those two items, there is by far enough information for any hacker to correlate your Merb account, along with all posts and reviews you have done over the years to your personal life. If you think that the Ashley Madison hack caused personal misfortune to many, then this would pale in comparison (not on the same scale of course but the data is far more damaging).
The first thing that anyone who uses this site should do, is to use an email that is separate, distinct and in no way tied to your personal life . The second thing is to use a different and strong password!! Even if your email is not separate, do you have any emails in there that in any way give hints as to your real email address?

So, with all this being said, the first thing is anyone should do is to change your password immediately. At the very least.
Second, the administrators of this board owe all of its clients a detailed explanation of what happened and if any user names, emails and passwords were compromised. If hackers did get in, the first thing they will do is to download the whole site. If this happened, and the hackers have any malicious thoughts, then we should all be doing what we can to erase all traces of ourselves from here. Unless, you answered negatively to the first two questions.

So Mods? Please explain what happened.
 

Halloween Mike

Original Dude
Apr 19, 2009
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If this happened, and the hackers have any malicious thoughts, then we should all be doing what we can to erase all traces of ourselves from here. Unless, you answered negatively to the first two questions.

.

I guess thats the big positive of being at ease with your life choices and having nothing to hide :)
 

escapefromstress

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Mar 15, 2012
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How to Commit Internet Suicide and Disappear from the Web Forever

Sick of horribly embarrassing things showing up when potential employers Google your name? Tired of everyone knowing you live in a garden level dungeon apartment? Perhaps you just don't like the fact the internet makes you easy to find. Thankfully, it's not that hard to delete yourself entirely.

Here's how to do it.

For mildly famous (or infamous) individuals, disappearing is essentially impossible, but for the average person it's surprisingly easy. It just depends on much info is already out there.

Step 1: Delete Your Social Network Accounts

Chances are the first results that pop up on a Google search of your name are your social network profiles. This likely includes things like Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Google+, and anywhere else you're using your real name. So, the first step to commit internet suicide is to remove these profiles. If you just want to remove search results, you can set your profiles to private, skip this step, and move on to step two. This isn't a perfect solution, but if you want to keep your social networks it will at least pull the results off the search engines.

Here's how to delete your accounts on the big social networks:

Facebook: To delete your Facebook profile, head to this link while you're logged in, click the "Delete My Account" button, and you're done. The process might take up to 14 days before your profile is completely gone. Doing it this way deletes all of your data, and it cannot be reactivated. Some messages might still show up, but anything you've been tagged in will have your name removed (although the pictures themselves will remain). If you want those pictures removed completely, report that you didn't give permission for that photo under the intellectual property tag on Facebook, or contact your friend directly and ask them to remove it.

Twitter: To delete your Twitter account, head to your account settings page, and click "Deactivate my account" at the bottom. Your account gets deleted completely, but it will take a few weeks before results stop showing up in searches.

LinkedIn: To delete your LinkedIn account, head to your settings page, click the "Account" icon, then the "close your account" link.

Google+: Google+ is a bit tricky because it's tied to your entire Google account. If you want to go ahead and close everything including email, calendars, and whatever else, sign into your primary Google Account homepage, and chose "Close account and delete all services and info associated with it." This will get rid of everything from Gmail to Google Checkout. If you only need to ditch the Google+ account, follow this link and select "Delete Google+ content." This will remove your profile from Google+, but retain any other Google services you have.

You'll want to follow the above steps for any other social networks you use, forum accounts you have, or other sites you registered under your real name (this might include Yelp, Amazon, Quora, etc).

If you have trouble remembering all your accounts, Account Killer has a huge list that includes direct links to deleting your profile from over 500 different sites. Your Google search for your name in the first step should also provide a guide to places you used your real name to create an account.

Step 2: Remove Unwanted Search Results

Once you get rid of your social profiles, content is likely still floating around the web that you need to get rid of. They might be images, articles, or even employer websites. The first thing to do is figure out where you're showing up online in search results. Search Google and make a note (or bookmark) where you name shows up on web sites.

You essentially have one course of action to remove this content: contact the source directly. Email the web site hosting the content and politely ask them to remove it (or at least remove your name). A quick email works well for places like former employers who still haven't removed you from the employees list, family members who post pictures of you on their personal blogs, or even on donation pages for causes you've supported. In due time it will drop from search results.

After that, you can appeal to the search engines directly to remove the edited pages right away. You can do so through Google, Google Images, or Bing by filling out a simple form and requesting the URL to be indexed again. This doesn't always work, but it's worth a shot. You'll have a better chance if someone is publishing libelous content about you, breaking a copyright of any kind, or if a page is displaying confidential information about you.

If you cannot get everything off of your Google search results, you might also consider burying personal data as far as possible. To do this while maintaining your vow to delete yourself from the internet forever, create profiles on popular social sites like Twitter, Google+, or Facebook as well as landing pages like About.Me with just your name and no other details. You can also set up your own website filled with lots of keywords about your name but no actual information (or just create a 410 error page and leave it at that). It's not as good as deleting content completely, but at least internet sleuths will only be lead to a blank page with no information on you.

Step 3: Get Rid of Background Check, Criminal, and Public Record Results

By now we've destroyed the bulk of your search results and social networks. But people can still run background checks and people searches on you very easily. It's time to destroy that personal data as best we can, and dig into various people databases.

Here are a few worth checking:

Zabasearch: Zabasearch is mostly about finding addresses and phone numbers. Make a quick search of yourself and see what it knows.

Intelius: Intelius can perform background checks, hunt down criminal records, email addresses, social networks, and more. You have to pay to get your results, but you'll get a general idea of what's out there by simply searching your name.

Spokeo: Spokeo is essentially an address book and it can track you down suprisingly well to reveal your gender, age, phone number, address, relatives, marital status, and a whole lot more. Again, it costs a bit of money to get your full results, but you can get a general idea of what you need to snuff out.

Pipl: Pipl aggregates all of the above searches, but it's worth looking at to make sure no others have slipped through the cracks.

If you're anything like me (or my neighbor who I also tested this on), then you're probably a little surprised by the amount of information these databases have. Now it's time to get rid of as many of those as possible. You have a couple different options for this. You can pay a service like DeleteMe $99 to go through and delete all these results. Or you can follow DeleteMe's own guide to do it yourself.

The DIY method requires you contact around 25 different sites individually to remove the listings that include your address, phone number, income, marital status, current job, and everything else. Some sites are as simple as opting out through a link (Reddit has a great collection of the easy ones), while others require that you send in proof of identification and a letter.

Going through this step will help get rid of everything that comes in search results, but it will not remove your data completely. As long as information like your address and phone number are registered somewhere, people will be able to find you. Going through the process of opting out of background checks, public records, and people search engines just makes that personal data harder to find.

Step 4: Remove Any Usernames Attached to an Email Address with Your Name

Any good internet sleuth will be able to link together your usernames on forums, web sites, and elsewhere with your email address. Subsequently, they'll eventually trace that back to your name. The process to remove this data is dependent on the forums and sites you use. If you can, unlink your primary email address with your username whenever possible. If you're dealing with forums, ask the moderators to delete any posts that identify you personally. Essentially, cut any ties between your email address or name with your username. If you use the same username for every site, consider coming up with new names for every site.

Step 5: Stay Off Search Engines Without Going Offline by Remaining Anonymous

From here on out you'll have to remain vigilant in not releasing your information publicly. That means no social networks with your real name, and a yearly audit of the background check websites to ensure they don't have any new information on you.

Chances are you still want to use the internet, right? In that case, you'll need to set up a few things to ensure your data stays locked down. That means creating a fake identity. To do so, you can create an email address on a service like Gmail or Outlook with a pseudonym. Fake Name Generator is a great way to come up with a new identity complete with birthdate, and everything else. You can also use a temporary email address for all your communications, and then use your new pseudonym and fake email address to sign up for any services you need.

To keep your cell phone records private, you might also consider using Google Voice instead of going through a carrier since you can make up your Google Account name. As for the rest of your browsing, we've shown you plenty of ways to keep your browsing anonymous before. This won't have an effect on any online searches for your name, but it will at least keep advertisers off your back. When it boils down to it, the internet is forever and truly resourceful people will always be able to find you. But if you take the steps outlined above, you'll at least thwart amateur internet sleuths and regain a touch of privacy.

http://lifehacker.com/5958801/how-to...he-web-forever
 

EagerBeaver

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One thing I have found is that younger people under 25 put their entire lives on their Facebook as if it is all private. It's bizarre. In personal injury cases I always do a Facebook search. I had a case around a year ago in which the 20 year old female plaintiff threw her disclosed medical expert under the bus on her Facebook. She said things like "he's an incompetent idiot and boob", an "asshole". I copied all these statements off her Facebook and was really looking forward to first marking her attorney's disclosure of expert witness and then confronting her with the Facebook statements. Unfortunately with her deposition looming her attorney called the insurance company and settled for chump change. I suspect he read the Facebook and realized her case sucked anyway even without those stupid statements denigrating her own expert witness. I was very upset the carrier pulled the plug because I wanted to cross examine her on the statements in front of a jury and watch them laugh.
 

ssj3

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Sep 11, 2015
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One thing I have found is that younger people under 25 put their entire lives on their Facebook as if it is all private. It's bizarre. In personal injury cases I always do a Facebook search. I had a case around a year an in which the 20 year old female plaintiff threw her disclosed medical expert under the bus on her Facebook. She said things like "he's an incompetent idiot and boob", an "asshole". I copied all these statements off her Facebook and was really looking forward to first marking her attorney's disclosure of expert witness and then confronting her with the Facebook statements. Unfortunately with her deposition looming her attorney called the insurance company and settled for chump change. I suspect he read the Facebook and realized her case sucked anyway even without those stupid statements denigrating her own expert witness. I was very upset the carrier pulled the plug because I wanted to cross examine her on the statements in front of a jury and watch them laugh.

That would've been epic EB. A few years ago I was involved in an accident where the person was faking an injury as well. Can't stand those kind of people.
 

Sol Tee Nutz

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Apr 29, 2012
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Look behind you.
Or you can not really care, sit back and chill. With the billions of online users and the minimal amount of hacks, plus some of kind of knowledge of what and what not to download and a good antivirus all will be good. For people that use the same password and panic when an online prompt tells you that a virus infected your device and just click here for a fix, inform yourself.
Most are adults here, use your head a little and all will be ok. Widespread panic hits here when an instance like this hits, people think the worst is about to happen. FredZ's first post explained what happened and from what I read it was not that serious, an admins account or accounts got hacked, unless you sent the admins your personal info why should you worry.
Just my opinion, I will not be losing sleep over this.
 

EagerBeaver

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Giving all your logins to one program so it can delete them so they won't be hacked... why does it smell fishy to me?

Sounds fishy to me as well. I think anything posted on the Internet is there forever, like a fingerprint that can't be removed. I think that site is just making money off paranoid people and not really doing anything meaningful. Hackers are very hard to defend against which is why the financial companies spend a small fortune on internet security.

I get alerts all the time, was told many times do not open non PDF attachments. All businesses are subject to attacks when an unsuspecting employees opening an attachment not in PDF of suspicious origin.
 

escapefromstress

New Member
Mar 15, 2012
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Or you can not really care, sit back and chill. With the billions of online users and the minimal amount of hacks, plus some of kind of knowledge of what and what not to download and a good antivirus all will be good. For people that use the same password and panic when an online prompt tells you that a virus infected your device and just click here for a fix, inform yourself.
Most are adults here, use your head a little and all will be ok. Widespread panic hits here when an instance like this hits, people think the worst is about to happen. FredZ's first post explained what happened and from what I read it was not that serious, an admins account or accounts got hacked, unless you sent the admins your personal info why should you worry.
Just my opinion, I will not be losing sleep over this.
.

Over the years, I have actually done quite a bit of writing back and forth to Fred about confidential issues that I would not want to become public, so this is a very real worry for some of us.
 

EagerBeaver

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EFS,

Your post raises a legitimate question about the security of some of those admin emails. There has not been a full explanation of what happened from Fred but what his posts on this matter have suggested is that maybe this was an attempt to divert advertiser's monies away from Fred's pockets and into the hacker's. If these hackers are in fact common internet scammers, their objective is theft of money and they would not care about your confidential info. If the hackers are LE, anti-prostitution lobbyists or Tony-like board rabble rousers, on the other hand, then your confidential info got leaked to the wrong bad actors. The former group of bad actors is pretty much only Fred's problem (and maybe some advertisers), but the latter group of bad actors give everyone something to worry about.

Tony did successfully hack a member's account a year or two ago because it had not been adequately password protected. The embarrassing result was Tony posting statements designed to make the member look foolish and stupid. While I am sure that episode was an annoyance and upsetting to the member involved, I don't think everyone took the posts too seriously although a few did initially.
 

jalimon

I am addicted member
Dec 28, 2015
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I am off topic a bit but, I am the only one not being able to put line breaks in my post? It's so annoying when you try to read a long post and there is no fucking line break, just one big block of text, scaring away many from reading your post. Have some of you had the same problem and if so, did you find a solution? Thanks!
 

escapefromstress

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Mar 15, 2012
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I am off topic a bit but, I am the only one not being able to put line breaks in my post? It's so annoying when you try to read a long post and there is no fucking line break, just one big block of text, scaring away many from reading your post. Have some of you had the same problem and if so, did you find a solution? Thanks!
.

Yes, it happens on V-Bulletin forums since the latest Chrome upgrade (I think that's what caused it).

See what I did when I replied to your post? If you type a period, then hit enter a couple times the spacing will be back to normal. Or if if you click Go Advanced, the new text box usually works ok.

(Now that I've re-read your post, I'm not sure if that's the same problem.)
 
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