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Wednesday 29 January 2014

How to Send Self-Destructing Messages

A lot of people are sceptical about their messages being read or stored for a longer time than required, or whatsoever. How about you write a message and it gets deleted after being read, just like that Mission Impossible movie thing – “This Message Will Self-Destruct”.

Here is how you do it, visit a web-based service (mentioned further below), write your message, click create link, send the link to people you want.

Here check out these two services:

1. PrivNote

  1. Create a note and get a link
  2. Copy the link and send it to whom you want to read the note
  3. The note will self-destruct after being read

privnote

Have you ever wanted to send confidential information within your work environment, to family or friends, but were afraid to do so over the internet, because some malicious hacker could be spying on you?

Privnote is a free web based service that allows you to send top secret notes over the internet. It's fast, easy, and requires no password or user registration at all.

Just write your note, and you'll get a link. Then you copy and paste that link into an email (or instant message) that you send to the person who you want to read the note. When that person clicks the link for the first time, they will see the note in their browser and the note will automatically self-destruct; which means no one (even that very same person) can read the note again. The link won't work anymore.

You can optionally choose to be notified when your note is read by leaving your email and a reference for the note.

2. OnesShares

Sending confidential information such as passwords, account information and other sensitive data in emails and IM is not necessarily safe. That data is typically stored with remnants of the bits in places you don't need it to be.

OneShares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3. TMWSD (This Message Will Self Destruct)

TMWSD is a secure messaging service. Messages sent are encrypted, securely transferred, and automatically deleted when they are retrieved.

TMWSD

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