100+ datasets found
  1. Social Media Datasets

    • brightdata.com
    .json, .csv, .xlsx
    Updated Sep 7, 2022
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    Bright Data (2022). Social Media Datasets [Dataset]. https://brightdata.com/products/datasets/social-media
    Explore at:
    .json, .csv, .xlsxAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Sep 7, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Bright Datahttps://brightdata.com/
    License

    https://brightdata.com/licensehttps://brightdata.com/license

    Area covered
    Worldwide
    Description

    Gain valuable insights with our comprehensive Social Media Dataset, designed to help businesses, marketers, and analysts track trends, monitor engagement, and optimize strategies. This dataset provides structured and reliable social media data from multiple platforms.

    Dataset Features

    User Profiles: Access public social media profiles, including usernames, bios, follower counts, engagement metrics, and more. Ideal for audience analysis, influencer marketing, and competitive research. Posts & Content: Extract posts, captions, hashtags, media (images/videos), timestamps, and engagement metrics such as likes, shares, and comments. Useful for trend analysis, sentiment tracking, and content strategy optimization. Comments & Interactions: Analyze user interactions, including replies, mentions, and discussions. This data helps brands understand audience sentiment and engagement patterns. Hashtag & Trend Tracking: Monitor trending hashtags, topics, and viral content across platforms to stay ahead of industry trends and consumer interests.

    Customizable Subsets for Specific Needs Our Social Media Dataset is fully customizable, allowing you to filter data based on platform, region, keywords, engagement levels, or specific user profiles. Whether you need a broad dataset for market research or a focused subset for brand monitoring, we tailor the dataset to your needs.

    Popular Use Cases

    Brand Monitoring & Reputation Management: Track brand mentions, customer feedback, and sentiment analysis to manage online reputation effectively. Influencer Marketing & Audience Analysis: Identify key influencers, analyze engagement metrics, and optimize influencer partnerships. Competitive Intelligence: Monitor competitor activity, content performance, and audience engagement to refine marketing strategies. Market Research & Consumer Insights: Analyze social media trends, customer preferences, and emerging topics to inform business decisions. AI & Predictive Analytics: Leverage structured social media data for AI-driven trend forecasting, sentiment analysis, and automated content recommendations.

    Whether you're tracking brand sentiment, analyzing audience engagement, or monitoring industry trends, our Social Media Dataset provides the structured data you need. Get started today and customize your dataset to fit your business objectives.

  2. Number of global social network users 2017-2028

    • statista.com
    • grusthub.com
    • +5more
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    Stacy Jo Dixon, Number of global social network users 2017-2028 [Dataset]. https://www.statista.com/topics/1164/social-networks/
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    Dataset provided by
    Statistahttp://statista.com/
    Authors
    Stacy Jo Dixon
    Description

    How many people use social media?

                  Social media usage is one of the most popular online activities. In 2024, over five billion people were using social media worldwide, a number projected to increase to over six billion in 2028.
    
                  Who uses social media?
                  Social networking is one of the most popular digital activities worldwide and it is no surprise that social networking penetration across all regions is constantly increasing. As of January 2023, the global social media usage rate stood at 59 percent. This figure is anticipated to grow as lesser developed digital markets catch up with other regions
                  when it comes to infrastructure development and the availability of cheap mobile devices. In fact, most of social media’s global growth is driven by the increasing usage of mobile devices. Mobile-first market Eastern Asia topped the global ranking of mobile social networking penetration, followed by established digital powerhouses such as the Americas and Northern Europe.
    
                  How much time do people spend on social media?
                  Social media is an integral part of daily internet usage. On average, internet users spend 151 minutes per day on social media and messaging apps, an increase of 40 minutes since 2015. On average, internet users in Latin America had the highest average time spent per day on social media.
    
                  What are the most popular social media platforms?
                  Market leader Facebook was the first social network to surpass one billion registered accounts and currently boasts approximately 2.9 billion monthly active users, making it the most popular social network worldwide. In June 2023, the top social media apps in the Apple App Store included mobile messaging apps WhatsApp and Telegram Messenger, as well as the ever-popular app version of Facebook.
    
  3. Social Media Engagement (2025)

    • kaggle.com
    Updated Mar 21, 2025
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    Damla Ağaça (2025). Social Media Engagement (2025) [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/dagaca/social-media-engagement-2025
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    CroissantCroissant is a format for machine-learning datasets. Learn more about this at mlcommons.org/croissant.
    Dataset updated
    Mar 21, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Kaggle
    Authors
    Damla Ağaça
    License

    MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Social Media Engagement (2025)

    This dataset contains 20,000 synthetic social media posts crafted to mimic realistic user activity on a fictional platform. It simulates various user demographics, post content, hashtags, topics, and detailed engagement metrics such as likes, comments, and shares.

    Overview

    Each record represents a unique social media post made by a user, enriched with features that allow for analysis of trends, behavior, and engagement. The dataset includes:

    • User-level information: age, gender, followers, verified status, etc.
    • Post-level information: topic, hashtags, media, engagement
    • Platform and device data
    • Calculated engagement rate

    Column Descriptions

    ColumnDescription
    post_idUnique identifier for each post
    user_idUnique identifier for each user
    user_nameSynthetic username
    user_genderGender of the user (Male, Female, Other)
    user_ageAge of the user (16–60)
    followers_countNumber of followers the user has
    following_countNumber of accounts the user follows
    account_creation_dateAccount registration date
    is_verifiedBoolean flag for verified users
    locationCity or region where the user is located
    topicMain topic of the post (e.g., Travel, Food, Fashion, etc.)
    post_contentActual content of the post
    content_lengthNumber of characters in the post content
    hashtagsRelevant hashtags used in the post
    has_mediaWhether the post includes image or video
    post_dateTimestamp of when the post was made
    deviceDevice used to make the post (e.g., iPhone, Android)
    languageLanguage of the post
    likesNumber of likes received
    commentsNumber of comments received
    sharesNumber of times the post was shared
    engagement_rateNormalized metric: (likes + comments + shares) / followers_count
  4. MultiSocial

    • zenodo.org
    • data.niaid.nih.gov
    Updated Aug 20, 2025
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    Dominik Macko; Dominik Macko; Jakub Kopal; Robert Moro; Robert Moro; Ivan Srba; Ivan Srba; Jakub Kopal (2025). MultiSocial [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13846152
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    Dataset updated
    Aug 20, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Zenodohttp://zenodo.org/
    Authors
    Dominik Macko; Dominik Macko; Jakub Kopal; Robert Moro; Robert Moro; Ivan Srba; Ivan Srba; Jakub Kopal
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    MultiSocial is a dataset (described in a paper) for multilingual (22 languages) machine-generated text detection benchmark in social-media domain (5 platforms). It contains 472,097 texts, of which about 58k are human-written and approximately the same amount is generated by each of 7 multilingual large language models by using 3 iterations of paraphrasing. The dataset has been anonymized to minimize amount of sensitive data by hiding email addresses, usernames, and phone numbers.

    If you use this dataset in any publication, project, tool or in any other form, please, cite the paper.

    Disclaimer

    Due to data source (described below), the dataset may contain harmful, disinformation, or offensive content. Based on a multilingual toxicity detector, about 8% of the text samples are probably toxic (from 5% in WhatsApp to 10% in Twitter). Although we have used data sources of older date (lower probability to include machine-generated texts), the labeling (of human-written text) might not be 100% accurate. The anonymization procedure might not successfully hiden all the sensitive/personal content; thus, use the data cautiously (if feeling affected by such content, report the found issues in this regard to dpo[at]kinit.sk). The intended use if for non-commercial research purpose only.

    Data Source

    The human-written part consists of a pseudo-randomly selected subset of social media posts from 6 publicly available datasets:

    1. Telegram data originated in Pushshift Telegram, containing 317M messages (Baumgartner et al., 2020). It contains messages from 27k+ channels. The collection started with a set of right-wing extremist and cryptocurrency channels (about 300 in total) and was expanded based on occurrence of forwarded messages from other channels. In the end, it thus contains a wide variety of topics and societal movements reflecting the data collection time.

    2. Twitter data originated in CLEF2022-CheckThat! Task 1, containing 34k tweets on COVID-19 and politics (Nakov et al., 2022, combined with Sentiment140, containing 1.6M tweets on various topics (Go et al., 2009).

    3. Gab data originated in the dataset containing 22M posts from Gab social network. The authors of the dataset (Zannettou et al., 2018) found out that “Gab is predominantly used for the dissemination and discussion of news and world events, and that it attracts alt-right users, conspiracy theorists, and other trolls.” They also found out that hate speech is much more prevalent there compared to Twitter, but lower than 4chan's Politically Incorrect board.

    4. Discord data originated in Discord-Data, containing 51M messages. This is a long-context, anonymized, clean, multi-turn and single-turn conversational dataset based on Discord data scraped from a large variety of servers, big and small. According to the dataset authors, it contains around 0.1% of potentially toxic comments (based on the applied heuristic/classifier).

    5. WhatsApp data originated in whatsapp-public-groups, containing 300k messages (Garimella & Tyson, 2018). The public dataset contains the anonymised data, collected for around 5 months from around 178 groups. Original messages were made available to us on request to dataset authors for research purposes.

    From these datasets, we have pseudo-randomly sampled up to 1300 texts (up to 300 for test split and the remaining up to 1000 for train split if available) for each of the selected 22 languages (using a combination of automated approaches to detect the language) and platform. This process resulted in 61,592 human-written texts, which were further filtered out based on occurrence of some characters or their length, resulting in about 58k human-written texts.

    The machine-generated part contains texts generated by 7 LLMs (Aya-101, Gemini-1.0-pro, GPT-3.5-Turbo-0125, Mistral-7B-Instruct-v0.2, opt-iml-max-30b, v5-Eagle-7B-HF, vicuna-13b). All these models were self-hosted except for GPT and Gemini, where we used the publicly available APIs. We generated the texts using 3 paraphrases of the original human-written data and then preprocessed the generated texts (filtered out cases when the generation obviously failed).

    The dataset has the following fields:

    • 'text' - a text sample,

    • 'label' - 0 for human-written text, 1 for machine-generated text,

    • 'multi_label' - a string representing a large language model that generated the text or the string "human" representing a human-written text,

    • 'split' - a string identifying train or test split of the dataset for the purpose of training and evaluation respectively,

    • 'language' - the ISO 639-1 language code identifying the detected language of the given text,

    • 'length' - word count of the given text,

    • 'source' - a string identifying the source dataset / platform of the given text,

    • 'potential_noise' - 0 for text without identified noise, 1 for text with potential noise.

    ToDo Statistics (under construction)

  5. Facebook users worldwide 2017-2027

    • statista.com
    • tokrwards.com
    • +5more
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    Stacy Jo Dixon, Facebook users worldwide 2017-2027 [Dataset]. https://www.statista.com/topics/1164/social-networks/
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    Dataset provided by
    Statistahttp://statista.com/
    Authors
    Stacy Jo Dixon
    Description

    The global number of Facebook users was forecast to continuously increase between 2023 and 2027 by in total 391 million users (+14.36 percent). After the fourth consecutive increasing year, the Facebook user base is estimated to reach 3.1 billion users and therefore a new peak in 2027. Notably, the number of Facebook users was continuously increasing over the past years. User figures, shown here regarding the platform Facebook, have been estimated by taking into account company filings or press material, secondary research, app downloads and traffic data. They refer to the average monthly active users over the period and count multiple accounts by persons only once.The shown data are an excerpt of Statista's Key Market Indicators (KMI). The KMI are a collection of primary and secondary indicators on the macro-economic, demographic and technological environment in up to 150 countries and regions worldwide. All indicators are sourced from international and national statistical offices, trade associations and the trade press and they are processed to generate comparable data sets (see supplementary notes under details for more information).

  6. News Headline Sentiment Dataset

    • zenodo.org
    bin
    Updated Mar 24, 2021
    + more versions
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    Chang Wei Tan; Chang Wei Tan; Christoph Bergmeir; Christoph Bergmeir; Francois Petitjean; Francois Petitjean; Geoffrey I Webb; Geoffrey I Webb (2021). News Headline Sentiment Dataset [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3902718
    Explore at:
    binAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 24, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    Zenodohttp://zenodo.org/
    Authors
    Chang Wei Tan; Chang Wei Tan; Christoph Bergmeir; Christoph Bergmeir; Francois Petitjean; Francois Petitjean; Geoffrey I Webb; Geoffrey I Webb
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    This dataset is part of the Monash, UEA & UCR time series regression repository. http://tseregression.org/

    The goal of this dataset is to predict sentiment score for news headline. This dataset contains 83164 time series obtained from the News Popularity in Multiple Social Media Platforms dataset from the UCI repository. This is a large data set of news items and their respective social feedback on multiple platforms: Facebook, Google+ and LinkedIn. The collected data relates to a period of 8 months, between November 2015 and July 2016, accounting for about 100,000 news items on four different topics: economy, microsoft, obama and palestine. This data set is tailored for evaluative comparisons in predictive analytics tasks, although allowing for tasks in other research areas such as topic detection and tracking, sentiment analysis in short text, first story detection or news recommendation. The time series has 3 dimensions.

    Please refer to https://archive.ics.uci.edu/ml/datasets/News+Popularity+in+Multiple+Social+Media+Platforms for more details

    Citation request
    Nuno Moniz and Luis Torgo (2018), Multi-Source Social Feedback of Online News Feeds, CoRR

  7. Social media platforms with highest ROI for B2B marketers worldwide 2023

    • statista.com
    • grusthub.com
    • +5more
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    Christopher Ross, Social media platforms with highest ROI for B2B marketers worldwide 2023 [Dataset]. https://www.statista.com/topics/1164/social-networks/
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    Dataset provided by
    Statistahttp://statista.com/
    Authors
    Christopher Ross
    Description

    According to a survey released in May 2023, B2B marketers considered Facebook the social media channel with the highest return on investment (ROI). The platform was mentioned by 22 percent of respondents. Instagram, TikTok and YouTube tied in second, each cited by 16 percent of the respondents.

  8. Social Media Platform Trends

    • kaggle.com
    Updated Mar 29, 2023
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    dekomori_sanae09 (2023). Social Media Platform Trends [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/dekomorisanae09/social-media-platform-trends
    Explore at:
    CroissantCroissant is a format for machine-learning datasets. Learn more about this at mlcommons.org/croissant.
    Dataset updated
    Mar 29, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Kaggle
    Authors
    dekomori_sanae09
    License

    https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    Description

    Get Actionable Insights on Social Media Behavior in India with a Comprehensive Dataset Covering Google Search, YouTube Search, and Reddit Posts. Discover the Latest Trends and Popular Topics Across Various Platforms!

  9. Most Followed Facebook accounts

    • kaggle.com
    Updated Jul 8, 2023
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    Aman Chauhan (2023). Most Followed Facebook accounts [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/whenamancodes/most-followed-facebook-accounts
    Explore at:
    CroissantCroissant is a format for machine-learning datasets. Learn more about this at mlcommons.org/croissant.
    Dataset updated
    Jul 8, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Kagglehttp://kaggle.com/
    Authors
    Aman Chauhan
    License

    https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    Description

    The Most Followed Facebook Accounts dataset provides information on the accounts with the highest number of followers on the Facebook platform. It includes data on various public figures, celebrities, organizations, and brands that have amassed a significant following, showcasing their popularity and influence on the social media platform.

  10. o

    Social Media Profile Links by Name

    • openwebninja.com
    json
    Updated Feb 2, 2025
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    OpenWeb Ninja (2025). Social Media Profile Links by Name [Dataset]. https://www.openwebninja.com/api/social-links-search
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    jsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Feb 2, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    OpenWeb Ninja
    Area covered
    Worldwide
    Description

    This dataset provides comprehensive social media profile links discovered through real-time web search. It includes profiles from major social networks like Facebook, TikTok, Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, Youtube, Pinterest, Github and more. The data is gathered through intelligent search algorithms and pattern matching. Users can leverage this dataset for social media research, influencer discovery, social presence analysis, and social media marketing. The API enables efficient discovery of social profiles across multiple platforms. The dataset is delivered in a JSON format via REST API.

  11. Leading social media platforms used by marketers worldwide 2025

    • statista.com
    • buyumeacoffee.com
    • +4more
    Updated Jul 24, 2025
    + more versions
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    Statista (2025). Leading social media platforms used by marketers worldwide 2025 [Dataset]. https://www.statista.com/statistics/259379/social-media-platforms-used-by-marketers-worldwide/
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    Dataset updated
    Jul 24, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Statistahttp://statista.com/
    Time period covered
    Jan 2025
    Area covered
    Worldwide
    Description

    During a 2025 survey among marketers worldwide, around 83 percent reported using Facebook for marketing purposes. Instagram and LinkedIn followed, respectively mentioned by 78 and 69 percent of the respondents. The global social media marketing segment According to the same study, 60 percent of responding marketers intended to increase their organic use of YouTube for marketing purposes throughout that year. LinkedIn and Instagram followed with similar shares, rounding up the top three social media platforms attracting a planned growth in organic use among global marketers in 2025. Their main driver is increasing brand exposure and traffic, which led the ranking of benefits of social media marketing worldwide. Social media for B2B marketing Social media platform adoption rates among business-to-consumer (B2C) and business-to-business (B2B) marketers vary according to each subsegment's focus. While B2C professionals prioritize Facebook and Instagram, both run by Meta, Inc., due to their popularity among online audiences, B2B marketers concentrate their endeavors on Microsoft-owned LinkedIn due to its goal to connect people and companies in a corporate context.

  12. DeepCube: Post-processing dataset of social media data

    • data.europa.eu
    • zenodo.org
    unknown
    Updated Jul 3, 2025
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    Zenodo (2025). DeepCube: Post-processing dataset of social media data [Dataset]. https://data.europa.eu/data/datasets/oai-zenodo-org-7732931?locale=da
    Explore at:
    unknownAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 3, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Zenodohttp://zenodo.org/
    Description

    Researcher(s): Alexandros Mokas, Eleni Kamateri Supervisor: Ioannis Tsampoulatidis This dataset contains the post-processing of the social media data collected for two different use cases during the first two years of the Deepcube project. More specifically, it contains two sub-datasets, including: The UC2 dataset containing the post-processing of the Twitter data collected for the DeepCube use case (UC2) dealing with the climate induced migration in Africa. This dataset contains in total 5,695,253 social media posts collected from the Twitter platform, based on the initial version of search criteria relevant to UC2 (defined by Universitat De Valencia), focused on the regions of Ethiopia and Somalia and started from 26 June, 2021 till March, 2023. The UC5 dataset containing the post-processing of the Twitter and Instagram data collected for the DeepCube use case (UC5) related to the sustainable and environmentally-friendly tourism. This dataset contains in total 58,143 social media posts collected from the Twitter and Instagram platform (12,881 collected from Twitter and 45,262 collected from Instagram), based on the initial version of search criteria relevant to UC5 (defined by MURMURATION SAS), focused on the regions of Brasil and started from 26 June, 2021 till March, 2023. For every social media post retrieved from Twitter and Instagram, a preprocessing step was performed. This involved a three-step analysis of each post using the appropriate web service. First, the location of the post was automatically extracted from the text using a location extraction service. Second, the images included in the post were analyzed using a concept extraction service, which identified and provided the top ten concepts that best described the image. These concepts included items such as "person," "building," "drought," "sun," and so on. Finally, the sentiment expressed in the post's text was determined by using a sentiment analysis service. The sentiment was classified as either positive, negative, or neutral. After the social media posts were preprocessed, they were visualized using the Social Media Web Application. This intuitive, user-friendly online application was designed for both expert and non-expert users and offers a web-based user interface for filtering and visualizing the collected social media data. The application provides various filtering options, an interactive map, a timeline, and a collection of graphs to help users analyze the data. Moreover, this application provides users with the option to download aggregated data for specific periods by applying filters and clicking the "Download Posts" button. This feature allows users to easily extract and analyze social media data outside of the web application, providing greater flexibility and control over data analysis. The dataset is provided by INFALIA. INFALIA, being a spin-off of the CERTH institute and a partner of a research EU project, releases this dataset containing Tweets IDs and post pre-processing data for the sole purpose of enabling the validation of the research conducted within the DeepCube. Moreover, Twitter Content provided in this dataset to third parties remains subject to the Twitter Policy, and those third parties must agree to the Twitter Terms of Service, Privacy Policy, Developer Agreement, and Developer Policy (https://developer.twitter.com/en/developer-terms) before receiving this download. License: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International

  13. Z

    MADOC: Multi-Platform Aggregated Dataset of Online Communities

    • data.niaid.nih.gov
    • zenodo.org
    Updated Mar 6, 2025
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    Maletic, Slobodan (2025). MADOC: Multi-Platform Aggregated Dataset of Online Communities [Dataset]. https://data.niaid.nih.gov/resources?id=zenodo_14637313
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 6, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Mitrovic Dankulov, Marija
    Cvetkovic, Darja
    Vranic, Ana
    Vudragovic, Dusan
    Major, Sara
    Maletic, Slobodan
    Bogojević, Aleksandar
    Stupovski, Boris
    Andjelkovic, Miroslav
    Tomašević, Aleksandar
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    The Multi-platform Aggregated Dataset of Online Communities (MADOC) is a comprehensive dataset that facilitates computational social science research by providing a unified, standardized dataset for cross-platform analysis of online social dynamics. MADOC aggregates and standardizes data from four distinct platforms: Bluesky, Koo, Reddit, and Voat, spanning from 2012 to 2024. The dataset includes 18.9 million posts, 236 million comments, and data from 23.1 million unique users across all platforms, with a particular focus on understanding community dynamics, user migration patterns, and the evolution of toxic behavior across platforms. By providing standardized data structures and FAIR-compliant access through Zenodo, MADOC enables researchers to conduct comparative analyses of user behavior, interaction networks, and content sentiment across diverse social media environments. The dataset's unique value lies in its cross-platform scope, standardized structure, and rich metadata, making it particularly suitable for studying societal phenomena such as community formation, toxic behavior propagation, and user migration patterns in response to platform moderation policies.

  14. Z

    DeepCube: Post-processing and annotated datasets of social media data

    • data.niaid.nih.gov
    • zenodo.org
    Updated Mar 15, 2024
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    Alexandros Mokas (2024). DeepCube: Post-processing and annotated datasets of social media data [Dataset]. https://data.niaid.nih.gov/resources?id=zenodo_7732930
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 15, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Eleni Kamateri
    Alexandros Mokas
    Giannis Tsampoulatidis
    License

    Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 (CC BY-SA 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Researcher(s): Alexandros Mokas, Eleni Kamateri

    Supervisor: Ioannis Tsampoulatidis

    This repository contains 3 social media datasets:

    2 Post-processing datasets: These datasets contain post-processing data extracted from the analysis of social media posts collected for two different use cases during the first two years of the Deepcube project. More specifically, these include:

    The UC2 dataset containing the post-processing analysis of the Twitter data collected for the DeepCube use case (UC2) dealing with the climate induced migration in Africa. This dataset contains in total 5,695,253 social media posts collected from the Twitter platform, based on the initial version of search criteria relevant to UC2 defined by Universitat De Valencia, focused on the regions of Ethiopia and Somalia and started from 26 June, 2021 till March, 2023.

    The UC5 dataset containing the post-processing analysis of the Twitter and Instagram data collected for the DeepCube use case (UC5) related to the sustainable and environmentally-friendly tourism. This dataset contains in total 58,143 social media posts collected from the Twitter and Instagram platform (12,881 collected from Twitter and 45,262 collected from Instagram), based on the initial version of search criteria relevant to UC5 defined by MURMURATION SAS, focused on the regions of Brasil and started from 26 June, 2021 till March, 2023.

    1 Annotated dataset: An additional anottated dataset was created that contains post-processing data along with annotations of Twitter posts collected for UC2 for the years 2010-2022. More specifically, it includes:

    The UC2 dataset contain the post-processing of the Twitter data collected for the DeepCube use case (UC2) dealing with the climate induced migration in Africa. This dataset contains in total 1721 annotated (412 relevant and 1309 irrelevant) by social media posts collected from the Twitter platform, focused on the region of Somalia and started from 1 January, 2010 till 31 December, 2022.

    For every social media post retrieved from Twitter and Instagram, a preprocessing step was performed. This involved a three-step analysis of each post using the appropriate web service. First, the location of the post was automatically extracted from the text using a location extraction service. Second, the images included in the post were analyzed using a concept extraction service, which identified and provided the top ten concepts that best described the image. These concepts included items such as "person," "building," "drought," "sun," and so on. Finally, the sentiment expressed in the post's text was determined by using a sentiment analysis service. The sentiment was classified as either positive, negative, or neutral.

    After the social media posts were preprocessed, they were visualized using the Social Media Web Application. This intuitive, user-friendly online application was designed for both expert and non-expert users and offers a web-based user interface for filtering and visualizing the collected social media data. The application provides various filtering options, an interactive map, a timeline, and a collection of graphs to help users analyze the data. Moreover, this application provides users with the option to download aggregated data for specific periods by applying filters and clicking the "Download Posts" button. This feature allows users to easily extract and analyze social media data outside of the web application, providing greater flexibility and control over data analysis.

    The dataset is provided by INFALIA. INFALIA, being a spin-off of the CERTH institute and a partner of a research EU project, releases this dataset containing Tweets IDs and post pre-processing data for the sole purpose of enabling the validation of the research conducted within the DeepCube. Moreover, Twitter Content provided in this dataset to third parties remains subject to the Twitter Policy, and those third parties must agree to the Twitter Terms of Service, Privacy Policy, Developer Agreement, and Developer Policy (https://developer.twitter.com/en/developer-terms) before receiving this download.

  15. m

    Survey Dataset on Face to Face Students' intention to use Social Media and...

    • data.mendeley.com
    Updated Jun 18, 2020
    + more versions
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    Akande Oluwatobi (2020). Survey Dataset on Face to Face Students' intention to use Social Media and Emerging Technologies for Continuous Learning [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.17632/vb2m5x5xhr.2
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 18, 2020
    Authors
    Akande Oluwatobi
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    One of the sectors that felt the impact of the Corona Virus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic was the educational sector. The outbreak led to the immediate closure of schools at all levels thereby sending billions of students away from their various institutions of learning. However, the shut down of academic institutions was not a total one as some institutions that were solely running online programmes were not affected. Those who were running face to face and online modes quickly switched over to the online mode. Unfortunately, institutions that have not fully embraced online mode of study were greatly affected. 85% of academic institutions in Nigeria are operating face to face mode of study, therefore, majority of Nigerian students at all levels were affected by the COVID-19 lockdown. Social media platforms and emerging technologies were the major backbones of institutions that are running online mode of study, therefore, this survey uses the unified theory of acceptance and use of technology (UTAUT) model to capture selected Face to face Nigerian University students accessibility, usage, intention and willingness to use these social media platforms and emerging technologies for learning. The challenges that could mar the usage of these technologies were also revealed. Eight hundred and fifty undergraduate students participated in the survey.

    The dataset includes the questionnaire used to retrieve the data, the responses obtained in spreadsheet format, the charts generated from the responses received, the Statistical Package of the Social Sciences (SPSS) file and the descriptive statistics for all the variables captured. This second version contains the reliability statistics of the UTAUT variables using Cronbach's alpha. This measured the reliability as well as the internal consistency of the UTAUT variables. This was measured in terms of the reliability statistics, inter-item correlation matrix and item-total statistics. Authors believed that the dataset will enhance understanding of how face to face students use social media platforms and how these platforms could be used to engage the students outside their classroom activities. Also, the dataset exposes how familiar face to face University students are to these emerging teaching and learning technologies.

  16. Z

    Data from: Five Years of COVID-19 Discourse on Instagram: A Labeled...

    • data.niaid.nih.gov
    • zenodo.org
    Updated Oct 21, 2024
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    Thakur, Ph.D., Nirmalya (2024). Five Years of COVID-19 Discourse on Instagram: A Labeled Instagram Dataset of Over Half a Million Posts for Multilingual Sentiment Analysis [Dataset]. https://data.niaid.nih.gov/resources?id=zenodo_13896352
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 21, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Thakur, Ph.D., Nirmalya
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Please cite the following paper when using this dataset:

    N. Thakur, “Five Years of COVID-19 Discourse on Instagram: A Labeled Instagram Dataset of Over Half a Million Posts for Multilingual Sentiment Analysis”, Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Machine Learning and Natural Language Processing (MLNLP 2024), Chengdu, China, October 18-20, 2024 (Paper accepted for publication, Preprint available at: https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.03293)

    Abstract

    The outbreak of COVID-19 served as a catalyst for content creation and dissemination on social media platforms, as such platforms serve as virtual communities where people can connect and communicate with one another seamlessly. While there have been several works related to the mining and analysis of COVID-19-related posts on social media platforms such as Twitter (or X), YouTube, Facebook, and TikTok, there is still limited research that focuses on the public discourse on Instagram in this context. Furthermore, the prior works in this field have only focused on the development and analysis of datasets of Instagram posts published during the first few months of the outbreak. The work presented in this paper aims to address this research gap and presents a novel multilingual dataset of 500,153 Instagram posts about COVID-19 published between January 2020 and September 2024. This dataset contains Instagram posts in 161 different languages. After the development of this dataset, multilingual sentiment analysis was performed using VADER and twitter-xlm-roberta-base-sentiment. This process involved classifying each post as positive, negative, or neutral. The results of sentiment analysis are presented as a separate attribute in this dataset.

    For each of these posts, the Post ID, Post Description, Date of publication, language code, full version of the language, and sentiment label are presented as separate attributes in the dataset.

    The Instagram posts in this dataset are present in 161 different languages out of which the top 10 languages in terms of frequency are English (343041 posts), Spanish (30220 posts), Hindi (15832 posts), Portuguese (15779 posts), Indonesian (11491 posts), Tamil (9592 posts), Arabic (9416 posts), German (7822 posts), Italian (5162 posts), Turkish (4632 posts)

    There are 535,021 distinct hashtags in this dataset with the top 10 hashtags in terms of frequency being #covid19 (169865 posts), #covid (132485 posts), #coronavirus (117518 posts), #covid_19 (104069 posts), #covidtesting (95095 posts), #coronavirusupdates (75439 posts), #corona (39416 posts), #healthcare (38975 posts), #staysafe (36740 posts), #coronavirusoutbreak (34567 posts)

    The following is a description of the attributes present in this dataset

    Post ID: Unique ID of each Instagram post

    Post Description: Complete description of each post in the language in which it was originally published

    Date: Date of publication in MM/DD/YYYY format

    Language code: Language code (for example: “en”) that represents the language of the post as detected using the Google Translate API

    Full Language: Full form of the language (for example: “English”) that represents the language of the post as detected using the Google Translate API

    Sentiment: Results of sentiment analysis (using the preprocessed version of each post) where each post was classified as positive, negative, or neutral

    Open Research Questions

    This dataset is expected to be helpful for the investigation of the following research questions and even beyond:

    How does sentiment toward COVID-19 vary across different languages?

    How has public sentiment toward COVID-19 evolved from 2020 to the present?

    How do cultural differences affect social media discourse about COVID-19 across various languages?

    How has COVID-19 impacted mental health, as reflected in social media posts across different languages?

    How effective were public health campaigns in shifting public sentiment in different languages?

    What patterns of vaccine hesitancy or support are present in different languages?

    How did geopolitical events influence public sentiment about COVID-19 in multilingual social media discourse?

    What role does social media discourse play in shaping public behavior toward COVID-19 in different linguistic communities?

    How does the sentiment of minority or underrepresented languages compare to that of major world languages regarding COVID-19?

    What insights can be gained by comparing the sentiment of COVID-19 posts in widely spoken languages (e.g., English, Spanish) to those in less common languages?

    All the Instagram posts that were collected during this data mining process to develop this dataset were publicly available on Instagram and did not require a user to log in to Instagram to view the same (at the time of writing this paper).

  17. f

    Twitter dataset

    • figshare.com
    txt
    Updated Dec 20, 2024
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    mehdi khalil (2024). Twitter dataset [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.28069163.v1
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    txtAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 20, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    figshare
    Authors
    mehdi khalil
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    The Truth Seeker Dataset is designed to support research in the detection and classification of misinformation on social media platforms, particularly focusing on Twitter. This dataset is part of a broader initiative to enhance the understanding of how machine learning (ML) and natural language processing (NLP) can be leveraged to identify fake news and misleading content in real-time.Dataset CompositionThe Truth Seeker Dataset comprises a substantial collection of social media posts that have been meticulously labeled as either real or fake. It was constructed using advanced ML algorithms and NLP techniques to analyze the language patterns in social media communications. The dataset includes:Raw Social Media Posts: A diverse range of tweets that reflect various topics and sentiments.Labeling: Each post is annotated with binary labels indicating its authenticity (real or fake).Feature Sets: Two distinct subsets of the dataset have been created using different NLP vectorization methods—Word2Vec and TF-IDF. This allows researchers to explore how different feature representations impact model performance.Research ApplicationsThe primary aim of the Truth Seeker Dataset is to facilitate the development and validation of models that can accurately classify social media content. Key applications include:Fake News Detection: Utilizing various ML algorithms, including Random Forest and AdBoost, which have demonstrated high F1 scores in preliminary evaluations.Model Comparison: Researchers can compare the effectiveness of different ML approaches on the same dataset, enabling a clearer understanding of which methods yield the best results in detecting misinformation.Algorithm Development: The dataset serves as a benchmark for developing new algorithms aimed at improving accuracy in fake news detection.

  18. Z

    Data from: TrueFace: a Dataset for the Detection of Synthetic Face Images...

    • data.niaid.nih.gov
    • zenodo.org
    Updated Oct 13, 2022
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    Boato, Giulia; Pasquini, Cecilia; Stefani, Antonio Luigi; Verde, Sebastiano; Miorandi, Daniele (2022). TrueFace: a Dataset for the Detection of Synthetic Face Images from Social Networks [Dataset]. https://data.niaid.nih.gov/resources?id=zenodo_7065063
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 13, 2022
    Dataset provided by
    University of Trento
    U-Hopper
    Authors
    Boato, Giulia; Pasquini, Cecilia; Stefani, Antonio Luigi; Verde, Sebastiano; Miorandi, Daniele
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    TrueFace is a first dataset of social media processed real and synthetic faces, obtained by the successful StyleGAN generative models, and shared on Facebook, Twitter and Telegram.

    Images have historically been a universal and cross-cultural communication medium, capable of reaching people of any social background, status or education. Unsurprisingly though, their social impact has often been exploited for malicious purposes, like spreading misinformation and manipulating public opinion. With today's technologies, the possibility to generate highly realistic fakes is within everyone's reach. A major threat derives in particular from the use of synthetically generated faces, which are able to deceive even the most experienced observer. To contrast this fake news phenomenon, researchers have employed artificial intelligence to detect synthetic images by analysing patterns and artifacts introduced by the generative models. However, most online images are subject to repeated sharing operations by social media platforms. Said platforms process uploaded images by applying operations (like compression) that progressively degrade those useful forensic traces, compromising the effectiveness of the developed detectors. To solve the synthetic-vs-real problem "in the wild", more realistic image databases, like TrueFace, are needed to train specialised detectors.

  19. Instagram accounts with the most followers worldwide 2024

    • statista.com
    • de.statista.com
    • +5more
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    Stacy Jo Dixon, Instagram accounts with the most followers worldwide 2024 [Dataset]. https://www.statista.com/topics/1164/social-networks/
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    Dataset provided by
    Statistahttp://statista.com/
    Authors
    Stacy Jo Dixon
    Description

    Cristiano Ronaldo has one of the most popular Instagram accounts as of April 2024.

                  The Portuguese footballer is the most-followed person on the photo sharing app platform with 628 million followers. Instagram's own account was ranked first with roughly 672 million followers.
    
                  How popular is Instagram?
    
                  Instagram is a photo-sharing social networking service that enables users to take pictures and edit them with filters. The platform allows users to post and share their images online and directly with their friends and followers on the social network. The cross-platform app reached one billion monthly active users in mid-2018. In 2020, there were over 114 million Instagram users in the United States and experts project this figure to surpass 127 million users in 2023.
    
                  Who uses Instagram?
    
                  Instagram audiences are predominantly young – recent data states that almost 60 percent of U.S. Instagram users are aged 34 years or younger. Fall 2020 data reveals that Instagram is also one of the most popular social media for teens and one of the social networks with the biggest reach among teens in the United States.
    
                  Celebrity influencers on Instagram
                  Many celebrities and athletes are brand spokespeople and generate additional income with social media advertising and sponsored content. Unsurprisingly, Ronaldo ranked first again, as the average media value of one of his Instagram posts was 985,441 U.S. dollars.
    
  20. s

    Twitter cascade dataset

    • researchdata.smu.edu.sg
    • smu.edu.sg
    • +1more
    pdf
    Updated May 31, 2023
    + more versions
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    Living Analytics Research Centre (2023). Twitter cascade dataset [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.25440/smu.12062709.v1
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    pdfAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    May 31, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    SMU Research Data Repository (RDR)
    Authors
    Living Analytics Research Centre
    License

    http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/

    Description

    This dataset comprises a set of information cascades generated by Singapore Twitter users. Here a cascade is defined as a set of tweets about the same topic. This dataset was collected via the Twitter REST and streaming APIs in the following way. Starting from popular seed users (i.e., users having many followers), we crawled their follow, retweet, and user mention links. We then added those followers/followees, retweet sources, and mentioned users who state Singapore in their profile location. With this, we have a total of 184,794 Twitter user accounts. Then tweets are crawled from these users from 1 April to 31 August 2012. In all, we got 32,479,134 tweets. To identify cascades, we extracted all the URL links and hashtags from the above tweets. And these URL links and hashtags are considered as the identities of cascades. In other words, all the tweets which contain the same URL link (or the same hashtag) represent a cascade. Mathematically, a cascade is represented as a set of user-timestamp pairs. Figure 1 provides an example, i.e. cascade C = {< u1, t1 >, < u2, t2 >, < u1, t3 >, < u3, t4 >, < u4, t5 >}. For evaluation, the dataset was split into two parts: four months data for training and the last one month data for testing. Table 1summarizes the basic (count) statistics of the dataset. Each line in each file represents a cascade. The first term in each line is a hashtag or URL, the second term is a list of user-timestamp pairs. Due to privacy concerns, all user identities are anonymized.

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Bright Data (2022). Social Media Datasets [Dataset]. https://brightdata.com/products/datasets/social-media
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Social Media Datasets

Explore at:
.json, .csv, .xlsxAvailable download formats
Dataset updated
Sep 7, 2022
Dataset authored and provided by
Bright Datahttps://brightdata.com/
License

https://brightdata.com/licensehttps://brightdata.com/license

Area covered
Worldwide
Description

Gain valuable insights with our comprehensive Social Media Dataset, designed to help businesses, marketers, and analysts track trends, monitor engagement, and optimize strategies. This dataset provides structured and reliable social media data from multiple platforms.

Dataset Features

User Profiles: Access public social media profiles, including usernames, bios, follower counts, engagement metrics, and more. Ideal for audience analysis, influencer marketing, and competitive research. Posts & Content: Extract posts, captions, hashtags, media (images/videos), timestamps, and engagement metrics such as likes, shares, and comments. Useful for trend analysis, sentiment tracking, and content strategy optimization. Comments & Interactions: Analyze user interactions, including replies, mentions, and discussions. This data helps brands understand audience sentiment and engagement patterns. Hashtag & Trend Tracking: Monitor trending hashtags, topics, and viral content across platforms to stay ahead of industry trends and consumer interests.

Customizable Subsets for Specific Needs Our Social Media Dataset is fully customizable, allowing you to filter data based on platform, region, keywords, engagement levels, or specific user profiles. Whether you need a broad dataset for market research or a focused subset for brand monitoring, we tailor the dataset to your needs.

Popular Use Cases

Brand Monitoring & Reputation Management: Track brand mentions, customer feedback, and sentiment analysis to manage online reputation effectively. Influencer Marketing & Audience Analysis: Identify key influencers, analyze engagement metrics, and optimize influencer partnerships. Competitive Intelligence: Monitor competitor activity, content performance, and audience engagement to refine marketing strategies. Market Research & Consumer Insights: Analyze social media trends, customer preferences, and emerging topics to inform business decisions. AI & Predictive Analytics: Leverage structured social media data for AI-driven trend forecasting, sentiment analysis, and automated content recommendations.

Whether you're tracking brand sentiment, analyzing audience engagement, or monitoring industry trends, our Social Media Dataset provides the structured data you need. Get started today and customize your dataset to fit your business objectives.

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