Snapchat, a photo-sharing app, has seen massive growth since launching last year in September.
We are convinced that that runaway growth has a lot to do with features that make it ideal for sexting, or sharing risqué photos of yourself with friends.
Or "friends," we should say, who turn around and share those photos with others or post them online.
Snapchat is pretty simple to use. You take a photo, send it to a friend, and decide how long they can see it for, anywhere between one and ten seconds. After that, it's gone.
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Sounds like a pretty good way to send naughty photos, right?
Wrong.
There's no such thing as safe sexting.
While Snapchat tries to deter users from taking screenshots, it's definitely still possible to do it.
Snapchat requires you to keep your finger on the photo the entire time you're looking at it, so mobility is limited. But anyone with two hands can easily figure out a way to make it work. Still, you need to be quick because the clock is literally ticking.
Snapchat will let you know if someone took a screenshot of your photo, but at that point, it's too late because now that person has their own copy of the picture to share with who knows how many people.
At least you've been warned.
We've asked Snapchat founder Evan Spiegel about all the sexting-friendly features he built into the app. After all, why worry about people sharing your photo if it's an innocent snapshot?
He hasn't responded to our questions, asking instead if we've used the app.
We have. It is possible to keep it clean while using Snapchat, as we're doing in this walkthrough. But it also gave us a clear picture of how teens might use the app in the real world.
Click the button on the right-hand side to add friends to share photos with.
You can pull in friends from Facebook or your address book.
Let the sexting begin! Take a picture of yourself or anything, really.
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