A consistent trend in our analysis is the lack of symmetry in Facebook activities. On average, Facebook users in our sample received more than they gave in terms of friendships and feedback on the content that is shared in Facebook. However, these averages need to be interpreted in context. This imbalance is driven by the activity of a subset of Facebook users who tend to be more engaged with the Facebook site than the typical user.

As a result of the intensive activity of the 19% of Facebook users who were very prolific at initiating friend requests, Facebook users on average (mean) had three friend requests that they initiated accepted, and they accepted an additional four friend requests from other users. On average, our sample of Facebook users made seven new friends per month.


How To Download My Facebook Activity


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Tagging friends in photos uploaded into Facebook is not a frequent activity of most Facebook users in our sample over the time that we were able to observe. Only 12% of our sample tagged a friend in a photo in the month of our analysis. However, while few do the tagging, 35% of users were themselves identified and tagged in a photo by a Facebook friend.

As with photo tagging, in our sample over the time period of one month, the act of joining a Facebook group was practiced by a small minority of users. Only 4% of our sample added a friend to a group in the month, while some 11% were added to a group by another Facebook user. However, Facebook groups may be an example of an activity that, while having a relatively low incidence over a short time period, may have broader impacts. Study of voluntary groups has shown that while most people belong to few groups, membership can be strongly predictive of many political, civic, and civil activities [4, 5].

Agritourism is recreational travel for agricultural activities. Agricultural operations benefit from income diversification, the public receives hands-on agricultural experiences, and rural communities benefit from economic development. However, agritourism operators have reported challenges in marketing. As social media becomes increasingly important in tourism marketing, the purpose of this research is to describe overall Facebook activity related to Oklahoma agritourism. A quantitative content analysis was conducted on 174 Facebook pages of Oklahoma agritourism operations to describe posts, public interaction, events, and advertisements. Oklahoma agritourism operations had a mean of 1,330 page likes, and 69% of Facebook pages had posts during the sample period of June 2018. Pages with at least one post had more than three times the number of page likes as pages without any posts. Amongst variables compared, user-generated content in the form of community posts and reviews had the strongest influence on overall page likes. Overall Facebook activity did not influence the number of people who were interested in an event, but there was a relationship between the number of people interested and timing of event posts. Additionally, pages with advertisements had more overall page likes but posted fewer times. Agritourism operators should encourage user-generated content, develop events, create at least one post, and consider sponsoring Facebook advertisements. Future research should describe post content, further explore the relationship of Facebook activity to overall page likes, and consider a sampling period outside of June to accommodate the possibility of seasonal fluctuations.

{"error_type": "OAuthException", "code": 400, "error_message": "Your account is connected to Facebook account, and your Facebook account's future off-Facebook activity is currently turned off."}

Currently, I open the activity log (e.g., ) and start scrolling down to get some info on the page. Then I use my browser to search for the text. But this is slow and, depending on how far back I want to go, tedious. Clicking on the earliest month/year in the filter only loads those periods specifically.

To be proactive, configure the social network not to link information about your activity on third-party services to your profile or use it to display personalized ads. You can do that for sites and apps individually or all at once.

In the data warehouse, we store data in tables and propagate it via pipelines across tables, so that computations can be performed asynchronously. In these tables, information is organized chronologically in daily partitions (similar to a server log) rather than by person. We constantly write new activity data to the end of a table and remove data from the beginning of the table as it expires. 


Our policies articulate which businesses can share information with us and what types of information they can share. For example, we prohibit businesses from sending us health, financial, and other types of sensitive data. Automated systems monitor incoming data to detect certain violations, and humans review the businesses that may be violating our policies. In addition to this monitoring, we also built a feature into Off-Facebook Activity that allows people to provide feedback about the activity they see.

When a person uses Facebook Login to access an app or website, he or she is assigned an app-scoped ID (ASID). This is a stable token that enables the app or website to maintain data associated with the person. Disconnecting the ASID would cause the app or website to not recognize a returning person. To prevent this disruption, we developed a different approach than the standard SID design. We maintain the ASID for people who have cleared their history, but we add noise by storing these ASIDs from connected apps or websites along with hundreds of ASIDs that have never been connected to apps or websites for that person. This allows us to retrieve the stable ASID for third-party apps or websites if a person ever chooses to log back in, but it also prevents us from having a canonical set of apps and websites used by a person who has disconnected their activity.

Upon logging back in to those disconnected apps or websites, a person receives a prompt notifying them that if they choose to continue connecting this app or website, Facebook will enable activity shared by that app or website to be connected with their account. If they enable this feature, they can allow us to store off-site activity for that specific app or website, without having to change their overall setting. If that is not a desired outcome, a person can often choose to create an account that is not powered by Facebook Login instead.

Objective:  To assess pharmacy students' Facebook activity and opinions regarding accountability and e-professionalism and determine effects of an e-professionalism education session on pharmacy students' posting behavior.

You can delete this activity by clicking Clear History, or (after clicking to expand the More Options section) you can click Manage Future Activity to turn off the recording of off-Facebook activity going forward.

Thank you for reaching out to us for assistance. Due to how the Instagram/Facebook API works, if the future off-Facebook activity setting is disabled, you can not use our Instagram or Facebook apps to display the feed. In order to connect the account and display the feed, you will have to connect using a Facebook account or Instagram account with its connected Facebook account that does have this enabled. There is currently no way around this since it is a limitation in the API directly, which we can not affect.

I am looking for such kind of Activity-stream as well. Currently there is too much information within the Activity-stream which is confusing.

Additionally, it is very hard to customize the Layout of the current activity-stream.

To access the Off-Facebook Activity settings using a computer browser: Click the question mark icon in the top right of the Facebook home page > Privacy Shortcuts > View or clear your Off-Facebook activity > Manage Your Off-Facebook Activity. (The steps are similar on a phone browser or in the app. Tap the icon with the three stacked lines in the top right, and find Privacy Shortcuts under Settings.)

Off-Facebook activity is collected data relating to your browsing habits provided to the social media platform by third-party entities. Websites and apps use tools, such as Facebook Pixel and Login, to monitor your activity and send that information through to Facebook.

Any organization that runs a website you visit or an app that you use could potentially report your activity to Facebook. Some companies use Business Tools provided by the social media platform to enhance their sites and monitor metrics, but such tools also facilitate the collection of your off-Facebook activity.

When you disable off-Facebook activity, the social media platform stops collecting off-site data related to your browsing and purchasing habits. Additionally, opting out of the program disconnects previously collected off-Facebook activity information from your account, supposedly wiping the slate clean.

While Facebook does collect off-Facebook information to monitor your activity on other apps and websites, no reports currently suggest that the company records offline events. Therefore, at this stage, your offline activities should remain safe from the prying eyes of the social media giant.

Confirm that all admins on the associated Business Manager account have the "off-facebook activity" feature toggled on. Not sure which Business Manager account owns the Facebook Page? Watch this demo (with sound) and follow the steps in this Facebook Help Guide.



Hi, I currently run multiple accounts and have encountered this issue for the first time. My Facebook activity is ON. Facebook is connected, but I can't connect to Instagram. Why is this still happening? 2351a5e196

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