Advertisement

Latest Activity

Yusuph Mcharia posted a status
"What's on your mind?"
18 minutes ago
Yusuph Mcharia posted songs
25 minutes ago
Profile Iconxiaomin, lidPamshe98, queen adu and 3 more joined G5 world
2 hours ago
TITO ANTHONY posted a status
"Hey people!Let us think about others who can not have even a single meal per day,while others are throwing foods."
12 hours ago

FIND G5 ON

ADVERTISEMENT

Top 3 Photos Today

1. yeah

Added by eddie juma on May 11, 2012

2. Miss mliman

Added by amran bakar on May 29, 2012

3. Enginear abdul malik

Added by amran bakar on May 29, 2012

No such thing as "deleted" on the Internet


Buzz up!on Yahoo!It's always fun to write about research that you can actually try out for yourself.

Try this: Take a photo and upload it to Facebook, then after a day or so, note what the URL to the picture is (the actual photo, not the page on which the photo resides), and then delete it. Come back a month later and see if the link works. Chances are: It will.

Facebook isn't alone here. Researchers at Cambridge University (so you know this is legit, people!) have found that nearly half of the social networking sites don't immediately delete pictures when a user requests they be removed. In general, photo-centric websites like Flickr were found to be better at quickly removing deleted photos upon request.

Why do "deleted" photos stick around so long? The problem relates to the way data is stored on large websites: While your personal computer only keeps one copy of a file, large-scale services like Facebook rely on what are called content delivery networks to manage data and distribution. It's a complex system wherein data is copied to multiple intermediate devices, usually to speed up access to files when millions of people are trying to access the service simultaneously. (Yahoo! Tech is served by dozens of servers, for example.) But because changes aren't reflected across the CDN immediately, ghost copies of files tend to linger for days or weeks.

In the case of Facebook, the company says data may hang around until the URL in question is reused, which is usually "after a short period of time." Though obviously that time can vary considerably.

Of course, once a photo escapes from the walled garden of a social network like Facebook, the chances of deleting it permanently fall even further. Google's caching system is remarkably efficient at archiving copies of web content, long after it's removed from the web. Anyone who's ever used Google Image Search can likely tell you a story about clicking on a thumbnail image, only to find that the image has been deleted from the website in question -- yet the thumbnail remains on Google for months. And then there are services like the Wayback Machine, which copy entire websites for posterity, archiving data and pictures forever.

The lesson: Those drunken party photos you don't want people to see? Simply don't upload them to the web, ever, because trying to delete them after you sober up is a tough proposition.

Views: 0

Comment

You need to be a member of G5 world to add comments!

Join G5 world

Comment by Attitude 'Andy' Scorpio on May 24, 2009 at 10:46am
And f U ddnt knoW....Now U know...

© 2012   Designed & Developed by G5 CLICK COMPANY.

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service