On FaceBook there are at least three different versions of your Posting or page

[Home, User, Public].

  

YOUR VERSION (Home)

That's the version you see when you click the "Home" tab . . . .

On "Home" view, you will have all of your events, except those you have hidden from the time line or deleted.   Plus you will be able to alter some viewing permissions.

  

USER NAME version

This is the version you get when you click on your "UserName" tab.

This is the designer/edit mode.

  

 WHAT THESE TWO DO

Because you can edit and make deletions in both of these views . .

I'm guessing that (and I may well be wrong) :-

   "UserName" is the design mode.

   "Home" is your viewing mode, aka "Your Wall".

  

OTHER VERSIONS

If you have groups or friends, on FaceBook, the "Friends will have a version (a wall) they'll see, and so would any other groups.

  

PUBLIC VERSION

But there's also the "Public" version - the view of your post or page which is open to anyone in the world to see.

  

SEEING THE PUBLIC VERSION

To see what the world sees, go to the "drop-down arrow" on the right hand side of the header [in FaceBook's dark blue Menu Panel].

       (it's black on dark blue - so it's easy to miss)


       Select "Settings"

               then "Timeline and tagging"


               At bottom of this section, a link "View As".

               Click on that and you'll get to see what the world sees.

  

ADDITIONAL

To come out of that mode - click the "UserName" or "Home" tab.

Be sure - I believe it is prudent to review it regularly.

       I hope this helps . . . .

               Tricky Micky

  

NOTE

Any pictures, names, addresses, eMail address, phone number and any other personal information open to the public there - will be harvested by identity thieves, scammers, perverts, con-merchants, data collectors etc . .


** End **

Your Version             Username Version             What These Do     


Other Versions             Public Version             Seeing Public Version


Additional                     Note