The New York Times said it has
seen copies of the data that still exist out in the wild.
Not exact matches
Under «General Account Settings,» at the bottom
of the list, underneath the boxed - in options, you'll
see a link that says, «Download a
copy of your Facebook
data.»
But this method only takes you so far, in our
data, we've
seen that 55 % -70 %
of sharing is actually URL
copy / paste which means those UTM parameters won't be there!
Visit «Settings» on Facebook, and under the «General» tab you will
see an option to «Download a
copy of your Facebook
data.»
After all, the NYT bestseller list is based (so they tell us) on anonymous and supposedly widely sourced
data from a lot
of bookstores, and wholesales who retail to other outlets... And has: 1) reputedly been cooked before 2) As we don't know the methodology is hard to check — but we know some very popular books never make it, and books which don't sell that many
copies (17K hardback was reputed to get you onto the extend list, according to a friend who got there on that) 3) We know Bookscan
data is pretty close to GIGO — so it's hard to
see where the NYT would get better
data.
To the larger issue — well, having
seen the big files that Brian Hibbs reports on, I can say that at least on the end -
of - year
data he's been getting, the figures seem generally reflective
of what they «should» be, which is 70 % or so
of the returnable -
copy sales I
see on royalty statements.
It will be intriguing to
see what you find out and will help if I can by perhaps checking the paper
copies against some
of the digital
data.
This: will change as I continue to transcribe the 2nd set
of data from hard
copy (about 75 % complete) but I can
see where the warming is: nightime lows.
In the first case, sure, get a
copy of the original
data,
copy the methods to
see if you get the same results, look for flaws in the methods, apply new, better methods and compare.
However, if some
of the stations used were from the remaining 49, then the above selection method could not have been applied (but
see below)-- unless there are other «hard
copy» station history
data not in the DOE report (but in China) that were used.
We don't usually)-- fields
of data: date, open price, high, low, closing, and volume — we are now sometimes asked for «number
of trades» and I do not
see that included —
data opens up in an Excel spreadsheet; I was able to easily
copy and paste it over into my office version
of Excel — I did not
see the ability to pull up summaries
of weekly, monthly, quarterly, or yearly
data (Canada Stockwatch doesn't offer this either).
I
see in this case that the agreement was at least predominantly verbal, and that the customer did not keep a
copy (ie, a backup)
of the
data, nor did they update their backup from the
copy in the service provider's hands, the one the provider is updating.
At the bottom
of the list
of options, you'll
see a hyperlink that says «Download a
copy of your Facebook
data.»
Step 3: At the bottom
of the «General Account Settings» menu, you'll
see an option to «download a
copy of your Facebook
data.»
In the right part
of the screen, click on the link that says «download a
copy»
of your Facebook
data (
see image below).
For those who do not want to wait for these updates, they may log into their accounts, go to «settings» and under the «general accounts settings» page, they will
see a line at the bottom
of the page that says «Download a
copy of your Facebook
data».
Head into your Facebook settings on the web, then under the «General» tab at the bottom you'll
see «Download a
copy of your Facebook
data.»
If you go to your general account settings, you will
see an option to download a
copy of your Facebook
data.