Log in and go to App Settings to find the Delete Account button at the bottom. Hover your cursor over the downwards pointing arrow next to your profile picture.
Click on Account in the drop-down menu. Click on the blue Finish Cancellation button to finalize the cancellation of your Netflix membership. When you have created your Netflix account, you may have noticed that a profile was created alongside it. You can rename it, change the language on it, edit maturity ratings, and make other tweaks, but you will never be able to delete it.
On the top right corner of the screen, tap Edit. If you see a delete icon on the left side of your payment method, tap on it. Tap on Remove on the right of the payment method. Yes, all of your links and bookmarks will continue to work. You will not need to go back and change them. They will simply redirect to the new URL. However, if you do change your links and bookmarks, it could save you a fraction of a second avoiding the redirect.
What if my username starts or ends with a dash or underscore? You will not have to change your username, but if you'd like to change it we will offer you one rename per username beginning or ending with a dash or underscore for free. If you'd like to take advantage of this offer, go to the Rename page while logged into that account. Weren't user subdomains previously a paid account feature? Yes, but now we've opened this feature to everyone. To offset this change to the paid account benefits, we are going to raise the voice post limit to 20 per month , up from just Paid account holders should also note that we recently increased the maximum number of custom S2 styles you can create from 10 to 50, and the maximum number of custom layers you can create increased from 50 to What do I need to do about this change?
You don't need to do anything. All URLs will automatically redirect, and the only change you will notice is the address that shows in your browser window. Why is this change good for me? This change makes your account and the entire site more secure. This was eventually made a separate option, like the 'friend of' list, and reworded so that the lists would have to be selected to include them in a profile, rather than to select an option to remove them. LiveJournal lists that users can hide communities from their profile page by not friending them friended communities are 'watched' and by either banning the community from posting in their journal which has no effect since they cannot anyway, but does remove them from the 'member of' list or by removing the 'friend of' list, which removes the 'member of' list in addition to the 'friend of' list.
LiveJournal allows paid account users to change privacy settings on past entries in bulk. Basic and plus accounts do not have an official web-based method, and normally must manually change such settings one by one; some third party clients, such as Livejournal Visibility Changer, [ 23 ] provide this functionality for non-Paid users.
Communities can also be private, with moderated or closed membership, when community holders give users different level of access to the content, based on the information about the user. While LiveJournal permits adult-oriented content, it is a user's responsibility to mark content as inappropriate for minors. There are two types of adult content: [ 25 ]. Adult concepts: This rating applies to content that is not explicitly graphic, but may contain things that are of a mature nature and could be inappropriate for anyone under the age of 14 years old.
Explicit Adult: This rating applies to graphic and explicit content depicting nudity, sexuality, violence in images and language that is appropriate only for adults, and is not suitable for viewers under the age of 18 years old. It is important to note that in speaking of adult material, it does not convey in any way that this content is considered obscene, in the legal definition of the term. Such content should be marked in order to be shown only to users whose birthdates on their userinfo page indicate that they are over the age of At the same time the user itself can set own preferences in Viewing Adult Content settings in order not to receive such materials.
It is written in the LiveJournal Rules that if the content is reported as being offensive or inappropriate, LiveJournal has the right to flag, restrict access, or delete it at any time without notice.
All users, including non-paying users, can set various options for comments: they can instruct the software to only accept comments from those on their friends list or block anonymous comments meaning only LiveJournal users can comment on their posts.
They can also screen various types of comments before they are displayed, or disable commenting entirely. Users can also have replies sent directly to their registered e-mail address. In addition, LiveJournal acts as host to group journals, dubbed "communities" frequently abbreviated as comms.
Anyone who joins a community can make posts to it as they would on a regular journal; communities also have "maintainers", ordinary users who run the community and oversee membership and moderation. LiveJournal community is a collective blog in which different users can post messages. Users who are interested in a particular subject can find or create a community for this subject. All the users of the communities are divided into:. Some areas of LiveJournal rely heavily on user contributions and volunteer efforts.
Similarly, the website is translated into other languages by volunteers, although this effort is running down due to a perceived lack of involvement from the LiveJournal administration.
The development of the LiveJournal software has seen extensive volunteer involvement in the past. In February and March , there was even an effort, nicknamed the Bazaar , to boost volunteer performance by offering money in return for "wanted" enhancements or improvements.
Nowadays, voluntary contributions to the software are considered for inclusion less and less as the company has acquired more and more paid employees who focus on the organization's commercial interests. This has led to the formation of several forks, many of which introduce new features that users would like to see at LiveJournal, especially features that are brought up repeatedly in LiveJournal's own suggestions journal.
In some cases legal and administrative concerns have led LiveJournal to prohibit some people from volunteering. As of November [update] , 39,, accounts exist on LiveJournal, with 1,, listed as "active in some way. LiveJournal is most popular in English-speaking countries although there is a language selection feature , and the United States has by far the most LiveJournal users among users who choose to list a location.
There is also a sizable Russian contingent. In April , the Oh No They Didn't community was moved to its own database cluster to improve site performance for all users, due to its size and the amount of traffic it was receiving. Frank the Goat is LiveJournal's mascot. During the early years of the site, Frank was treated like an actual living being by much of the LiveJournal userbase, and his brief "biography" as well as his "journal" reflect this.
As of July the community has roughly 8, members, and is watched by more than 7, LiveJournal users. Beginning at the end of January , LiveJournal's weekly news posts included references to Frank's life, [ 50 ] becoming works of short fiction at the end of February.
From September 2, , until December 12, , the growth of LiveJournal was checked by an "invite code" system. This curbing of membership was necessitated by a rate of growth faster than the server architecture could handle. New users were required to either obtain an invite code from an existing user or buy a paid account which reverted to a free account at the expiration of the period of time paid for. The invite code system serendipitously reduced abuse on the site by deterring people from creating multiple throw-away accounts.
The invite code system was lifted after a number of major improvements to the overall site architecture. Elimination of the invite code system was met with mixed feelings and some opposition. LiveJournal's management pointed out that the invite code system was always intended to be temporary.
The dual usage of "friend" as those whose journals one reads, and those one trusts to read one's own journal, has been criticized for being at odds with everyday use of the term.
The individual users on a user's friends list may contain a mixture of people met through real world friendships, online friendships and general interests, as well as courtesy friendships where a user has " friended " someone who friended them.
A friends list may represent something entirely unrelated to social relationships, such as a reading list, a collection or a puzzle. The difference between online and real-world friendships is sometimes a source of conflict, hurt feelings, and other misunderstandings.
LiveJournal friendships are not necessarily mutual; any user can befriend or "defriend" any other user at any time. The Dreamwidth code fork of LiveJournal has split the 'friend' concept into its two component pieces of subscription and access. As LiveJournal has grown, it has had to deal with issues involving the content it hosts. Like most web logging hosts, it has adopted a basic Terms of Service. LiveJournal created an Abuse Prevention Team and processes to handle claims about violations of the Terms of Service, violations of copyright, violations of the law , and other issues.
There is an ability for a user to report an entry as "spam", and it is a user's responsibility to separate spamming and bot activity from actual violations while reporting. If the Abuse Prevention Team determines that a violation has occurred, the user will be either required to remove the infringing material as in the case of copyright violations ; [ 56 ] the journal will be suspended until such time as the material can be removed e.
When a journal is suspended, it effectively removes from sight everything the user has written on LiveJournal, including comments in other people's journals; however, the user is able to download the material while suspended.
Those suspended users who have paid for LiveJournal's service do not have payments refunded. A small controversy arose in November when a policy document used by the Abuse Prevention Team was leaked to a group of its critics before it was due to be released. The policy document has since been officially released. Another controversy arose when users complained after an unknown number of users were asked to remove default user pictures containing images of breast feeding that were considered inappropriate as they contained a view of nipples or areolae.
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