# Using Micro-collections in Social Media to Generate Seeds for Web   Archive Collections

**Authors:** Alexander C. Nwala, Michele C. Weigle, Michael L. Nelson

arXiv: 1905.12220 · 2019-05-30

## TL;DR

This paper explores the use of social media micro-collections as a novel source for generating seed URIs to improve web archive collections, analyzing their characteristics and comparing them to traditional sources.

## Contribution

It introduces the concept of social media micro-collections as a new seed source and provides a detailed analysis of their characteristics and effectiveness compared to conventional methods.

## Key findings

- Generated 23,112 seed collections from social media posts.
- Collected 120,444 URIs from various sources including micro-collections.
- Characterized seed collections across multiple dimensions such as URI distribution and diversity.

## Abstract

In a Web plagued by disappearing resources, Web archive collections provide a valuable means of preserving Web resources important to the study of past events ranging from elections to disease outbreaks. These archived collections start with seed URIs (Uniform Resource Identifiers) hand-selected by curators. Curators produce high quality seeds by removing non-relevant URIs and adding URIs from credible and authoritative sources, but it is time consuming to collect these seeds. Two main strategies adopted by curators for discovering seeds include scraping Web (e.g., Google) Search Engine Result Pages (SERPs) and social media (e.g., Twitter) SERPs. In this work, we studied three social media platforms in order to provide insight on the characteristics of seeds generated from different sources. First, we developed a simple vocabulary for describing social media posts across different platforms. Second, we introduced a novel source for generating seeds from URIs in the threaded conversations of social media posts created by single or multiple users. Users on social media sites routinely create and share posts about news events consisting of hand-selected URIs of news stories, tweets, videos, etc. In this work, we call these posts micro-collections, and we consider them as an important source for seeds because the effort taken to create micro-collections is an indication of editorial activity, and a demonstration of domain expertise. Third, we generated 23,112 seed collections with text and hashtag queries from 449,347 social media posts from Reddit, Twitter, and Scoop.it. We collected in total 120,444 URIs from the conventional scraped SERP posts and micro-collections. We characterized the resultant seed collections across multiple dimensions including the distribution of URIs, precision, ages, diversity of webpages, etc...

## Full text

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## Figures

72 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1905.12220/full.md

## References

43 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1905.12220/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1905.12220