Who can see my history on Facebook?
Note: Only you can see your activity log, but the posts and other content in your activity log may appear other places on Facebook, like on your profile, in Search or in your friends' Feeds.
Incognito browsing
In Incognito, none of your browsing history, cookies and site data, or information entered in forms are saved on your device. This means your activity doesn't show up in your Chrome browser history, so people who also use your device won't see your activity. To use incognito browsing: Open Chrome.
Check Recent Activity Log Using the Facebook Side Tab
This method works if the person you want to monitor is on your friends' list. By clicking the Facebook side tab, you can access the person's new posts and comments.
Your History shows the pages you've visited on Chrome in the last 90 days. It doesn't store Chrome pages you've visited like chrome://settings, pages you've visited in private browsing, or pages you've already deleted from your browsing history.
A virtual private network (VPN) hides your browser history and all your online activities from ISPs, Wi-Fi owners, cybercriminals, snoopers, your mom, your boss, and everyone else!
When you clear your browser history, you're only deleting the history that's locally stored on your computer. Clearing your browser history doesn't do anything to the data stored on Google's servers.
You can create a new account to see your friends' latest activity on Facebook and know what they've been up to. If you want to check out someone's activity on Facebook, create a new account and send them a request. You'll now start seeing their Facebook activities on your news feed, such as posts, comments, and likes.
If the person you want to monitor is on your Facebook friends list, you can check their activities, such as group messages, new posts, comments, and friend requests. However, you can do it only if they share their posts in public.
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Instead of deleting entire categories of your browsing data, you can pick items to delete:
- Page you visited.
- Downloaded file.
- Saved password.
- Cookies from a website.
- Autofill entry.
While police do not actively monitor Google searches, they are able to obtain a warrant for your search history if they have probable cause to do so.