An industry expert said Uber and other companies wouldn’t be notified if you trashed an app on your phone. You’d have to go one step further.

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As social media erupted with outrage over a sexism scandal at the app-based ride service Uber over the weekend, consumers in Seattle and around the country vowed to “delete the app” in protest.

But unless people followed that up with a tweet or Facebook post — or entirely deleted their account with the company — the message might not have been received.

“A developer is not notified when an application is deleted,’’ said Morgan Reed, executive director of The App Association, a Washington, D.C.-based trade association that represents more than 5,000 app and information-technology companies.

“They may notice a decrease in information flowing from an app or reconnecting to their services,’’ he said. “All it knows is that your application is dormant.”

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That’s due to privacy concerns, and practical considerations that take into account multiple devices, new devices and user error, Reed said.

The company might also see a decline in use over time, he noted.

“We would not want anyone to delete an app, ever,’’ he said, but doing so would not, on its face, send a message of protest.

What a company can see, however, are deleted accounts, and social-media posts. A spokesman for Uber could not say how many accounts were deleted as a result of the scandal. But there was no question about the backlash on social media.

The hashtag #deleteUber trended over the weekend after an engineer wrote a blog post describing a year’s worth of sexual harassment she says she endured at the San Francisco-based company.

The engineer, Susan Fowler Rigetti, alleged that she and other women reported harassment to Uber’s human-resources department, but their allegations went nowhere because her boss was a “high performer.”

Uber’s CEO, Travis Kalanick, on Monday hired former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder and a partner at Holder’s law firm to review the workplace issues raised by the blog, and the lack of diversity at the company.

“I believe in creating a workplace where a deep sense of justice underpins everything we do,’’ he said in an email to employees. He added that he hoped the scandal would help “set a new standard for justice in the workplace.”

Local reaction to Fowler Rigetti’s blog was swift and harsh on social media.

“Yet another reason to boycott @Uber,’’ tweeted Samia Dillsi.

“About to #deleteuber,’’ tweeted Sydnie Jones, a Seattle-based writer. “@Travisk is lying, indifferent &/or incompetent. I hope you’re humiliated and ashamed.”

Jones said in a message that she hadn’t deleted the underlying account, but that she would.

“I’ve only used Uber through the app, so it didn’t occur to me,’’ she wrote, “but I suppose it’s not as effective to only deny them my business if they can technically still count me as a user.”

Still, she said, “social-media pressure is so effective. I think it plays a bigger role.”