No drunk comments: iOS app will clean the Internet for you
This happened to you: wake up with a headache, take the phone and understand that in a not sober state they wrote something terrible or offensive on the Internet. Will you apologize to the person you offended? Or just open an application that will find your potentially negative comments on social networks and delete them?
The creator of this app was fired from the team of US presidential candidate Jeb Bush for tweets six years ago.

The Clear application for iOS connects to user accounts on social networks and looks for comments containing obscene words and words on the subject of race and sexual orientation. After completing the search, the user receives the result in percent - how much it is “clean”. Offensive messages can be deleted from the application to make the user profile favorable for finding friends, romantic partners or employers. The service works in test mode with Facebook and Twitter.
The application developer knows how dangerous tweets and comments can be to reputation. Ethan Chachor was Jeb Bush's chief technical officer, but in February 2015, journalists found tweets for 2009: he used the word “whore” in relation to women and made homophobic statements.
Ethan apologized for his behavior and learned from a bad experience a useful idea - to create an application that will protect the reputation of users.
The creator of this app was fired from the team of US presidential candidate Jeb Bush for tweets six years ago.

The Clear application for iOS connects to user accounts on social networks and looks for comments containing obscene words and words on the subject of race and sexual orientation. After completing the search, the user receives the result in percent - how much it is “clean”. Offensive messages can be deleted from the application to make the user profile favorable for finding friends, romantic partners or employers. The service works in test mode with Facebook and Twitter.
The application developer knows how dangerous tweets and comments can be to reputation. Ethan Chachor was Jeb Bush's chief technical officer, but in February 2015, journalists found tweets for 2009: he used the word “whore” in relation to women and made homophobic statements.
Ethan apologized for his behavior and learned from a bad experience a useful idea - to create an application that will protect the reputation of users.
... and i've resigned my role at right to rise. best of luck to everyone there, and i apologize in advance to whoever fills my position.
- Ethan Czahor (@czahor) February 11, 2015