Digital footprints can shape your life with how much people use computers today. It is important to shape your digital footprint as much as possible to avoid unwanted situations. A good way to do so is to not create a mass amount of social media, excluding accounts that may be required for items in your house or on your computer. The purpose of such is that you can monitor what you post and what other people post about you easily. With a lot of social media accounts, it will become a hassle and could lead to trouble in the long end. Also, with less accounts, you can also be sure of what information the internet has about you--most of the time. Another thing that could help someone maintain a good digital footprint is reviewing what you post. Almost everything is logged on the internet. If you post an image, it is saved to the internet and you can never remove it. If you say something to someone that may hurt them, that is stuck on the internet. Some people insist that they can remove their post if they regret it, and it is no longer on the internet. This is simply not true. For example, Twitter.com (a social media domain, not owned by me) has a log of everything you post and say on their application. Being careful about what is posted is crucial to keeping a good digital footprint. If someone were to look for information about me in the future, I would hope they would find my coding projects, or something among those lines. I barely post on anything other than that, for the time being, so I do not thing they would find much more. In 10 years, I hope (assuming I do make an app) that they will find my application and take it into consideration. I aspire to become a game/app developer in the near future, so if I have a published app already out in the internet, it would help tremendously. With that, I conclude this page.