Peter Webster

New article from the ever-productive and smart folk at Old Dominion

"Challenges in replaying archived Twitter pages"

link.springer.com/article/10.1

SpringerLinkChallenges in replaying archived Twitter pages - International Journal on Digital LibrariesHistorians and researchers rely on web archives to preserve social media content that no longer exists on the live web. However, what we see on the live web and how it is replayed in the archive are not always the same. In this study, we document and analyze the problems in archiving Twitter after Twitter switched to a new user interface (UI) in June 2020. Most web archives could not archive the new UI, resulting in archived Twitter pages displaying Twitter’s “Something went wrong” error. The challenges in archiving the new UI forced web archives to continue using the old UI. But, features such as Twitter labels were a part of the new UI; hence, web archives archiving Twitter’s old UI would be missing these labels. To analyze the potential loss of information in web archival data due to this change, we used the personal Twitter account of the 45th President of the USA, @realDonaldTrump, which was suspended by Twitter on January 8, 2021. Trump’s account was heavily labeled by Twitter for spreading misinformation; however, we discovered that there is no evidence in web archives to prove that some of his tweets ever had a label assigned to them. We also studied the possibility of temporal violations in archived versions of the new UI, which may result in the replay of pages that never existed on the live web. We also discovered that when some tweets with embedded media are replayed, portions of the rewritten t.co URL, meant to be hidden from the end-user, are partially exposed in the replayed page. Our goal is to educate researchers who may use web archives and caution them when drawing conclusions based on archived Twitter pages.