Tiger, there's an app for that

Tiger, if you’re reading this, remember that you’ve been through what mothers call a “valuable learning experience” and you’re probably a “better man for it” and so on. Having said that, an iPhone app that launched last week could totally have saved you $20 million in alimony.

Called, coincidentally enough, TigerText, it allows users to set a time limit for a sent text to hang around after it has been read. When that life span has been exceeded, the message will disappear, say the developers, from the recipient’s phone, the sender’s phone and any servers. The message cannot be forwarded anywhere, stored anywhere or sold to any tabloid for an undisclosed sum.

It works like this: when, say, a prominent politician sends his mistress an iPhone message via TigerText, the mistress will be prompted to install the app. When she has done so, she can read the message, but she can’t keep it. In fact, the message is never actually sent to her phone; it’s stored on TigerText’s servers. After the politician’s specified time span has elapsed — anywhere from one minute to five days — the message ceases to exist. There’s even a “delete on read” setting, which counts down from 60 after a message is opened and erases its text at zero.

4 Comments

  1. bd

    That is sweet. Nice scandal application.

  2. AV

    Genius. Making cheating easier…who would have though

  3. and TigerText ACTUALLY deletes these texts?

    Or is it like when i empty my recycle bin on my computer, where im not ACTUALLY deleting it from my computer’s memory.

  4. bd

    Tiger needed the voicemail version too.

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