Hi, Are there any good places to find one-to-two month-old twitter data? (other than http://twapperkeeper.com/) Thaks, -Robert
I recommend checking out http://blog.tweetsmarter.com/twitter-search/10-ways-and-20-features-for-sea rching-old-tweets. Has a pretty good list of tools that should work. Even though it was written in Aug. 2010, they still update the page. Hope that helps! -- Jon Barilone, Community Manager UC Humanities Research Institute Digital Media & Learning Hub Phone: 949-824-4858 Email: jbarilone@hri.uci.edu http://twitter.com/dmlcentral http://youtube.com/DMLResearchHub http://facebook.com/DMLResearchHub On 10/28/11 10:49 AM, "nativebuddha" <nativebuddha@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi,
Are there any good places to find one-to-two month-old twitter data? (other than http://twapperkeeper.com/)
Thaks,
-Robert _______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
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Hi Robert, on Fri, 28 Oct 2011 13:49:05 -0400 nativebuddha <nativebuddha@gmail.com> wrote:
Are there any good places to find one-to-two month-old twitter data? (other than http://twapperkeeper.com/)
Ulf-Dietrich Reips and I created a service that may be of your interest, iScience Maps: http://maps.iscience.deusto.es As we are not allowed to provide Twitter data itself (current Twitter's Terms of Service explicitly forbids it), iScience Maps Global Search allows researchers to do quantitative searches from our local database (not very big -we solely store geo-tagged tweets from Twitter Streaming API-, around 6 million tweets from 15th of September 2010 to the present day). I know this is not what you asked, but I hope it helps O:-) Best, -- Pablo Garaizar Sagarminaga Universidad de Deusto Avda. de las Universidades 24 48007 Bilbao - Spain Phone: +34-94-4139000 Ext 2512 Fax: +34-94-4139101
If and when the Library of Congress opens up a full service Twitter sampling portal, that will be the place for the most complete population of archival Tweets. There are reasons to wonder if that day will ever arrive. The technical difficulty of that task is enormous. We have archived about 150 million tweets so far and the computational challenges presented delivering sampling and analytic tools are significant. Until such time as we get a WayBack machine for all tweets, the best thing to do is to archive them day-forward as history unfolds. We first experimented with this during the Arab Spring and have since created numerous collections using the public API and now also with the Power Track for Twitter (the so-called full firehose) from GNIP. The minute news breaks, or a hunch emerges about an interesting stream of Tweets (ex., #occupy or #ghaddafi) we start a new collector running and let it run until enough tweets are archived for almost any conceivable study purpose. When a stream is high volume, this does not take long. With the GNIP Power Track, you also get interesting metadata, depending on the user who created the Tweet. Here is a sample of some of the fields you might see associated with a Tweet. country code: id: klout score: link: location coord type: location coords: location displayname: location type: posted time: real name: rule match: tweet url: user twitter page: username: The trick is to be ready as historic news breaks or a movement unfolds. Whereas we used to teach our students that the newspaper was the first draft of history, now we must certainly say the newspaper is third or fourth. The first draft of history is Twitter and Facebook. The digital artifacts are in many ways more democratic when user-created, not to mention super amenable to analysis that might test that hunch. We are just finishing round one of a very fruitful first round beta test of the GNIP Power Track. http://blog.texifter.com/index.php/2011/10/20/gnips-power-track-via-dt/ There will be round two in about a week or two from now. The beta is free. To sign up, please visit: http://discovertext.com/home/gnip ~Stu On Fri, Oct 28, 2011 at 3:33 PM, Pablo Garaizar Sagarminaga < garaizar@deusto.es> wrote:
Hi Robert,
on Fri, 28 Oct 2011 13:49:05 -0400 nativebuddha <nativebuddha@gmail.com> wrote:
Are there any good places to find one-to-two month-old twitter data? (other than http://twapperkeeper.com/)
Ulf-Dietrich Reips and I created a service that may be of your interest, iScience Maps: http://maps.iscience.deusto.es
As we are not allowed to provide Twitter data itself (current Twitter's Terms of Service explicitly forbids it), iScience Maps Global Search allows researchers to do quantitative searches from our local database (not very big -we solely store geo-tagged tweets from Twitter Streaming API-, around 6 million tweets from 15th of September 2010 to the present day).
I know this is not what you asked, but I hope it helps O:-)
Best,
-- Pablo Garaizar Sagarminaga Universidad de Deusto Avda. de las Universidades 24 48007 Bilbao - Spain
Phone: +34-94-4139000 Ext 2512 Fax: +34-94-4139101
_______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
-- Stuart Shulman President & CEO Texifter, LLC <http://www.texifter.com/> Have you tried DiscoverText? http://discovertext.com *Featuring the Facebook Graph & Twitter APIs*
participants (4)
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Jon Barilone -
nativebuddha -
Pablo Garaizar Sagarminaga -
Stuart Shulman