Please Report Issues

I have added a new form through which you can make us aware of any bugs or issues you happen to see while using the site. Issues reported from that form will now be added directly to our issue tracking system.

Please do note that since data submitted here will be sent to us via a third party (so we can keep track of submitted issues using a software tool developed by a third-party vendor) entries to this form are not quite as private as ...

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Bulk Deletion

I've long wanted to add a way to delete links in bulk, and I finally got around to adding that feature today. See the "BULK DELETE" button at the upper right on any page that lists a set of links.

I'm hoping to add more bulk editing functionality in the future. Stay tuned.

Current Safari Extension Won't Work in Safari 13

Safari 13 will be released soon; it will be bundled with MacOS 10.15 Catalina next month, and available via software update on older versions of MacOS. Safari 13 brings changes in the way that extensions work, and these changes will mean that our own Safari extension will no longer work.

We are working on a new extension that will be built to work with MacOS 10.15 and beyond, but due to the scope of the changes required in order to support new versions ...

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Things We Don't Do: Remember You Forever

It isn't always immediately obvious what a tech company might be doing with your data. Because LinkLocker is designed to appeal to exactly the sort of people who might be uncomfortable with dumping their information into a black box and simply hoping for the best, we want to be as open as possible about what happens to the data you put into your LinkLocker account. To that end, we're publishing this series of articles tagged "Things We Don't Do," in which I discuss many of the Web's questionable practices and explain why we do not engage in those practices. In this post, I'd like to talk about the fact that LinkLocker does not hold onto your data in perpetuity. When you ask us to forget something, that's exactly what we do.

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Things We Don't Do: Excessive Logging

It's no secret that we're firm believers in the idea that our users' data is theirs alone, and that it should be kept private. Part of our overall privacy maintenance strategy is simply to avoid doing a lot of the really gross and/or stupid things tech companies typically do in order to show you ads, or to track your behavior for their own "learnings," etc. Because these sorts of things aren't always immediately obvious, we think it's important to spell out explicitly what it is we aren't doing. To that end, I'll be publishing a series of posts tagged "Things We Don't Do." For this first installment, I'd like to talk about our logging policies. Most services store a reference to everything you do, even when they don't have a good reason to do so. We store as little info about you as possible.

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