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Under "Potential Connections," toggle whether you will receive message requests or not. Under "Other People," toggle whether you will receive message requests or not. Message requests toggled on will make it so that message requests will be delivered to your "Message Requests" folder. Having this feature toggled off will make it so that you don't receive message requests. Maybe you want this feature toggled on for your followers because you know and trust them, but you want it toggled off for other people so you won't get messages from strangers.
You can also find the "Restrict" feature by tapping the drop-down arrow next to where it says "Following" underneath the account's display name and bio. Choose an option between blocking that one specific account and blocking that account as well as new accounts they may create. To be safest, we suggest the latter. Choose whether to allow mentions from everyone, just people you follow, or no one. Having this set to "Everyone" will make it so you get a notification when someone "mentions" you on Instagram, like, for example, if someone tags you in a comment section.
Tap the reason you're reporting the account, and complete the steps that follow depending on which option you choose. If you choose "It's posting content that shouldn't be on Instagram," selecting an option from the list that follows may send the report instantly. At the very top of the Privacy menu, tap the switch next to "Private Account" to toggle it on or off. You may see a popup telling you what switching to a private account entails.
After you read it, tap "Switch to Private" to make your account private. As the popup message says, switching to a private account will make it so only your followers will be able to see your posts.
It will not change who can message, tag, or mention you. A Quora response from Facebook programmer Keith Adams also indicates that this is likely the case. You know those results that pop up in the Facebook search bar as you type? They always seem to favor certain people, don't they? Nervous, aren't you? Well, don't be. They probably won't give away your voyeuristic behavior either.
This bookmarklet will tell you how Facebook ranks your friends for you for search purposes. After the bookmarklet was first released, Adams stressed that "visiting someone's profile does not affect the search results of anyone but yourself.
However, if the person you are stalking online has access to your Facebook account, in theory they could use this tool or play around with your search bar to get a vague idea of who you search for the most — so don't give your password out to people you are obsessed with on Facebook. Even though your online crush doesn't know you're watching them, Facebook does. Typically, information associated with your account will be kept until your account is deleted," Facebook writes on its website.
Where is this data kept? Think someone is stalking you on Instagram? Think someone might have a secret crush on you and is following you online? Want to know if someone is taking a little too much interest in what you do on social media? This tutorial will show you how to tell if someone is either watching but not engaging or just lurking on your Instagram. Social media is exactly that, social. Unfortunately, your options get limited for finding out if someone is constantly viewing your Instagram profile.
Your only option is Instagram Stories which, like its Snapchat progenitor, tells you who viewed it. Instagram Stories are essentially a copy of Snapchat Stories, and they work in almost the same way. You create a post, set it as a Story, and then it becomes public for 24 hours before it disappears. Just like Snapchat, Instagram Stories tell you who has viewed your Story.
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