The whole point of Facebook is to make networking super easy for people. When you deactivate your Facebook account, you cut yourself off from enjoying this benefit.
You lose touch with your online social circle until you reactivate your account. Facebook promises to save your personal information on your account when you deactivate it. It should be there waiting for you as soon as you reactivate and get back online. This information includes posts, emails and friends lists. If you know you're completely done with the site and will never again want access to your profile, friends, photos or any other content on the site, deletion gets it done.
Facebook assures your account deletion will not happen right away, giving you a few days to change your mind and cancel. After that time, though, you'll lose all access to your account and no other users will be able to see any of your content. The key benefit to deactivation over deletion is the ability to change your mind and come back.
Reactivating your account only requires you to visit Facebook and sign in again. Since you may not have used the account in a while, you might have forgotten the password.
If so, Facebook provides a link for resetting your password. You need access to the email address connected to your Facebook account. While reactivating your account restores your friends list, Timeline and other content, you do not automatically regain admin privileges for any pages you formerly ran. And of course, if you choose to reactivate your Facebook account, all of those posts will revert to normal.
What happens if you delete Facebook permanently? Facebook will erase your data within three months, but there are no guarantees that it will clear every last bit of flotsam and jetsam—comments, reactions, and posts on others' timelines.
What does a deactivated Facebook account look like? You won't be able to check their profile because links revert to plain text. Posts they've made on your timeline will still exist but you will not be able to click on their name. If you're concerned that someone has been unusually quiet on Facebook, there are three options to consider.
The first is that they're simply busy. Try messaging them to ask if they're okay. Look through your list of friends. If they're still listed, they're probably just preoccupied.
If they're not, the second possibility is that they've blocked you. But before you investigate that, question whether they've deleted their account completely. So how do you know if someone has blocked you on Facebook or deactivated their account?
Go to a mutual friend's profile and check whether it shows the person in question. If their name is searchable, the profile still exists. Sadly, though, that probably means they blocked you. Check on Messenger; there could be a technical issue. You can't send a message to someone who has blocked you, and their profile picture will be replaced on any comments they've previously posted on your timeline. You might worry that by deactivating Facebook, you won't be able to use the separate but nonetheless connected Messenger app.
They're both owned by the same company and mine the same contact list. It seems like Messenger cannot exist without its parent, and that used to be the case.
When you deactivate your account, Facebook will ask if you want to deactivate Messenger too. Say no, and the app will retain your information. If you'd prefer to go without the instant messaging service, you can deactivate Messenger separately. In some cases, you'll need to reinstall Messenger after deactivation. If you delete Facebook, you'll certainly have to sign into the app again, albeit using a slightly different method. To do this, you simply click Not On Facebook?
Allow it access to your address book so you can keep in touch with friends. To delete your Facebook account , follow this link to the Delete My Account page. If you'd like to save photos and posts from your account, click Download Info. Then click Delete Account.
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