What happens if I Delete my MySpace account?

What happens if I Delete my MySpace account?

Following this, a Myspace representative should email you within a few days, confirming that your account has been deleted. However, the representative may require additional information to be able to remove your account from the platform.

When did MySpace lay off all its employees?

Down to about 200 employees, Myspace announced in November of 2013 that it would lay off 5% of its workforce. Under the ownership of Specific Media LLC and pop music singer and actor Justin Timberlake, the site has switched gears with a strong focus on music and other creative outlets.

Is it possible for MySpace to make a comeback?

Comeback stories are real. Whether Myspace can make one happen, only time will tell. For now we take a step back, learn from their mistakes and consider how to seize the opportunities still present before us. Why don’t you send us a friend request?

What’s the status of my old Myspace profile?

Much has changed in the Myspace world since it was pushed out of the limelight by Facebook, Instagram and most recently Snapchat. It’s now almost unrecognisable from its heyday, with music, videos and pictures applications replacing the blue-blocked Myspace profile page we all grew to love.

What happens to your body when you die in space?

The creepy-sounding system uses a technique called promession, which essentially freeze-dries a body. Instead of producing the ash of a traditional cremation, it would turn a frozen corpse into a million little pieces of icy flesh.

How many people have died in space so far?

We’ve lost only 18 people in space—including 14 NASA astronauts—since humankind first took to strapping ourselves to rockets. That’s relatively low, considering our history of blasting folks into space without quite knowing what would happen. When there have been fatalities, the entire crew has died, leaving no one left to rescue.

What happens to your body when you die on Mars?

“I would expect that if a crew member died while on Mars, we would bury them there rather than bring the body all the way home,” Hadfield says. That makes sense because of the long journey back, but it poses some potential contamination problems.

Comeback stories are real. Whether Myspace can make one happen, only time will tell. For now we take a step back, learn from their mistakes and consider how to seize the opportunities still present before us. Why don’t you send us a friend request?