As a service devoted to short and sweet communication, the ways for
publicly embarrassing yourself on Twitter are blissfully few, beyond
tweeting something asinine.
Still, Twitter's relatively bare-bones functionality offers a few interesting pitfalls worth addressing.
The most obvious is that, unlike with Facebook, your tweets are by default viewable by the entire world (that's the idea), and so anything you post can (and if you're any good, will) be shared across the globe instantly.
But just because you share your thoughts doesn't mean you give up all rights to privacy. Here are a few things to protect.
Twitter's geotagging feature shouts out your location when you post updates.
That can be risky behavior not only for your privacy and that of those you tweet about at the time, but at the extremes could be an issue for your physical safety (or a trusty method for enterprising robbers to case your crib).
- Click the Settings wheel and select Settings.
- Click the big Delete All Location Information button to completely disable this feature.
- You can also choose not to share your locale on a case-by-case basis.
If you're the famous sort, or simply want a more Facebook-like functionality with Twitter, you can choose to protect your tweets.
- Click the Settings wheel and select Settings.
- Check the box next to Protect My Tweets.
The most common privacy hiccup on Twitter happens when you link your account to other social-media channels.
If you've made the mistake of connecting Twitter to Facebook, here's how to unconnect yourself.
- Click the Settings wheel and select Settings.
- Select Profile.
- Check Disconnect at the bottom of the page.
- Click Save Changes.
Credits:Laptopmag,Technewsdaily