Information revelation and privacy in online social networks
Proceedings of the 2005 ACM workshop on Privacy in the electronic society
Agreeing to disagree: search engines and their public interfaces
Proceedings of the 7th ACM/IEEE-CS joint conference on Digital libraries
Selection and context scoping for digital video collections: an investigation of youtube and blogs
Proceedings of the 8th ACM/IEEE-CS joint conference on Digital libraries
Poking facebook: characterization of osn applications
Proceedings of the first workshop on Online social networks
Crawling Facebook for social network analysis purposes
Proceedings of the International Conference on Web Intelligence, Mining and Semantics
PrEV: preservation explorer and vault for web 2.0 user-generated content
TPDL'12 Proceedings of the Second international conference on Theory and Practice of Digital Libraries
Evaluation of web 2.0 technologies for developing online telehealth systems
HIKM '12 Proceedings of the Fifth Australasian Workshop on Health Informatics and Knowledge Management - Volume 129
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Web users are spending more of their time and creative energies within online social networking systems. While many of these networks allow users to export their personal data or expose themselves to third-party web archiving, some do not. Facebook, one of the most popular social networking websites, is one example of a "walled garden" where users' activities are trapped. We examine a variety of techniques for extracting users' activities from Facebook (and by extension, other social networking systems) for the personal archive and for the third-party archiver. Our framework could be applied to any walled garden where personal user data is being locked.