Who knew a page full of links could be so useful?
JustDelete.me is a page full of links -- not ugly blue hyperlinks but links disguised as buttons. Each button represents an online service; anything from LinkedIn to Skype to Wikipedia.
Click a button and JustDelete.me will take you to the page on that
online service that allows you to delete your account. If you click the
"show info" link under each button, meanwhile, JustDelete.me will tell
you, in plain English, how to delete your account from that site.
Buttons are color-coded: a green button means deleting your account
is easy, a yellow button means it's moderately difficult, red means it's
hard and black (uh-oh) means "it's impossible to delete your account on
this site."
Turns out some sites love your data so much they won't remove it. Ever.
In addition to its primary purpose of teaching people how to delete
their accounts -- and serving as a one-stop shop for people who want to
pare down their online presence -- JustDelete.me publicly shames
services that don't let users remove their data. And for those who
haven't yet created eternal accounts on these types of sites, including
Netflix, Pinterest or Pastebin, JustDelete.me serves as a warning that
some sites will never let you go.
JustDelete.me was created by Robb Lewis,
a UK-based developer frustrated by the lack of transparency offered in
online service deletions. "After seeing a few tweets about how difficult
it can be to delete your Skype account and then hearing that Netflix
flat-out won’t delete your details I decided to build JustDelete.me," Lewis writes on his blog. Lewis is currently taking suggestions for sites to add to JustDelete.me; he can be emailed or contacted on Twitter here.
Source: Huffington Post
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