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Showing posts from July, 2021

Google now allows you instantly to delete your browsing history for the last 15 mins.

Here's a quick summary:  Google's previously-announced privacy feature, which will erase the last fifteen minutes of your mobile search history, is now available. Google I/O 2020 was when the company introduced the "quick Delete" option. This tool is also available in a variety of privacy- and safety-focused tools. According to the company, it was one of their most popular features. The tool is only currently available in Google's iOS application but will be available in Android later "this year,"  according . You will need to sign in with Google Search to use quick delete. You can access the setting by tapping on the avatar icon. Then, choose "Delete last fifteen minutes." Desktop users have the ability to automatically delete any web or app activity (via Activity Controls) after every three, 18, or 36 months. Google insists that it doesn't track users' search history to improve their experience. Previous Google search history removal

The Taliban have entered a key city in western Afghanistan as they continue a rapid advance before Nato troops leave.

All government officials in Qala-e-Naw, provincial capital of Badghis province, had been moved to a nearby army base, the local governor told the BBC. He said the militants were moving "towards the centre of the city" and there was heavy fighting with government troops. The Taliban gains come as the US, UK and allies withdraw after 20 years. The vast majority of remaining foreign forces in Afghanistan have left ahead of an 11 September deadline, leaving the Afghan military in sole charge of security. Local sources told the BBC the Taliban moved on the prison in Qala-e-Naw and freed about 400 inmates, including more than 100 of the group's fighters. Afghan forces guarding the prison are reported to have surrendered without a fight. Governor Hisamudin Shams said he had seen the Taliban in the district of Qala-e-Naw where he lives, and the headquarters of the intelligence service had been set on fire. But he denied reports the city had fallen to the Taliban, and said Afghan