Wednesday, May 18, 2016

Facebook Working to Permanently Remove all Deleted Photos


Facebook has confirmed that over the next two months it will finally fix an issue that has left a of deleted photos live and available on its system.Currently, not all photos that are deleted by users are gone completely as some can still be seen on the social network by anyone with a direct link to the ,as Ars Technica reports. This isan issue which has not been fixed more than three yrs after first being highlighted, and it continues to frustrate users who seek to removeembarrassing, private or unsuitable s from the social network.The company says that by April it will complete the migration of all users’ s to a new content management system on which every photo deleted by a user will be removed from Facebook’s servers and the service permanently. According to Facebook, that entire deletion process will be carried out within 45 days of the initial removal request.A spokesman confirmed that its initial efforts to fix the problem fell flat due to issues with its previous system:[The new] process is nrly complete and there is only a very small percentage of user photos still on the old system awaiting migration. We expect this process to be completed within the next month or two, at which point we will verify the migration is complete and we will disable all the old content.The systems we used for photo storage a few yrs ago did not always delete s from content delivery networks in a rsonable period of time even though they were immediately removed from the site.It seems almost unbelievable that this issue could have gone unfixed by Facebook for such a significant amount of time, particularly given the of requests and concerned emails that Ars Technica claims to have received since itfirst coveredthe issue in 2009.It cites a of examples, including a man whose friend posted photographed his toddler crawlign naked in his garden, as proof of the continued problems. While the photo of the toddler was deleted in April 2008, the original link is still live and the can be seen almost four yrs after it was ‘removed’.More interestingly, links to a of undeleted s in the original 2009 article were permanently removed by Facebook without comment of confirmation. This action clrly shows that someone at the social network was aware of the issue and took action to mitigate the situation by removing the links, which could make the issue appr to be remedied.As Ars Technica rightly claims, we will have to wait and see if Facebook will finally deliver on its promise to put this very basic user right into action.
Source: The Next Web

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