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  • Does anyone no how to delete your received and sent messages after the new updat?

    Samsung Galaxy S3

    • If you try to make an account, but you say that you’re under 13, it won’t let you actually send a picture, only take one and draw on it and such.

  • Does anyone else have an issue with not receiving notifications of new snaps? The app has not once notified me on Galaxy Nexus running AOKP

      • usually delete the cache and data from the app will fix it. I had the same problem when restoring from titanium, but this usually fixes it.

        • Wouldn’t deleting the data require you to have to sign in again defeating the purpose of doing a restore?

          • In theory, yes. But it just works. Sometimes there are a few hiccups that happen across different ROM builds. Besides, snapchat doesn’t have that many important things in the cache and data. Just try it out 🙂

          • To be perfectly honest I could care less about the data saved I’m just lazy with passwords and such lol

  • Didn’t even know this made it to Android. Must have been Internet out of office that day.

  • Bummer.. I like the new interface. But they fixed the cyanogen mod screen shot detection. Previously, if you have CM10.1 and you took a screen shot with the volume down and power button. Snapchat didn’t recognize the screen shot. Now it does.. 🙁

    Update!: If you enable the new CM10.1 Privacy Gaurd on SnapChat. You can still send and receive messages, and SnapChat is unable to detect screenshots!!

    • You poor thing. Now your girls you snap will know you’re creeping on them.

      • My aim is actually to inform my friends of the loophole. There is nothing worse then app that lies and says that it can do things it can’t. Like protect your pictures. Luckily I can still demonstrate to friends and family that it is possible to screen shot without getting a warning. And that they should avoid sending ‘private’ pictures because they aren’t actually private or protected.

    • I just got a degree in digital forensics, and as soon as I saw this I was intrigued. I wonder what they ended up doing. I mean, it is technically deleted for almost any avid smartphone user, but if someone really wanted to forensically analyze a phone, they could find it.

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