



We’ll work to grow this list over time, but don’t hesitate to reach out if you’d like to see different platforms covered. But how do you figure out how to do this for each platform? We’re glad you asked! Here’s our list of guides you can consult right now. Depending on where you like, share, and post, there are various ways to download your data to keep a copy of it on your computer. If you’re like most people, you probably have your data spread out across multiple platforms. In this post we will go more in depth about best practices of how to back up this data once you’ve downloaded it. We think so! And so we’ve developed a series of posts to help you retrieve your data from social media profiles, ranging from Facebook to Tiktok, and other services where the long term reliability of or your data might be in question. If we are spending even a fraction of that time each day creating content to be shared with family and loved ones, don’t we want to make sure we have those creations forever? In 2019, it was reported that internet users spend an average of two hours and 22 minutes per day on social networking. Some of these websites and apps are still here, some look a little different, and some are not around anymore. There was the AIM phase, Napster phase, Wikipedia phase, Skype phase, and of course the boom of social media with Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and more. We’ve all lived through our own different phases of the internet age. But how permanent are these things we share? When it comes to the memories we want to hold on to, will they always be there? Then the internet became a place where the average user could share their voice, videos, and pretty much everything else. In the beginning there was the World Wide Web and, for us common folk, it was used to send electronic mail and instant messages.
