|VERIFIED| Download Facebook Video - Google Search

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Alma Lopez

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Jan 25, 2024, 10:36:40 AM1/25/24
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I know that it is possible, using the search field in Facebook itself. Just typing "All people living in ???" returns a list of people.I couldn't find such functionality in the Graph-API of Facebook. Here is what I tried:

download facebook video - google search


Download Filehttps://t.co/RVwLCkcJYm



You can either search for a location OR search for a user, but you can definitely not search for "all users in an area". The Graph search on Facebook can handle a lot more things that you will never be able to get with the API. Think about privacy, i would not want any app to know if i am nearby, without even authorizing the App ;)

Methodology Note: I chose English language examples as our user interface because new search options often appear first in English. However, most examples will work in other languages. In addition, I included screenshots to capture how these examples looked at the time conducted the searches. These results may change over time, however.

As a search engine, Facebook has its limitations. There is no chronological order in public postings by default, and you cannot search for a particular month or time period, such as postings from the summer of 2000.

How does this tip help you search Facebook? Say, you want to find a post about a grubhub contract.It will display some accurate results. But it will also display posts with the unwanted phrase contact(ed) in it:

The About page on Facebook typically includes a list of professionals in the same line of work. By searching for the About page only, you can quickly find a list of potential sources, who you can then reach out to.

The new, searchable database FBarchive is designed to help researchers, journalists, and policymakers better understand and investigate decisions made at Meta about some of the most influential social media platforms across the globe.

Shawn, yes I mean Google and other searches as well as Facebook. I have checked my privacy settings and they seem to be ok. My account is not new either. I will play around some more with the settings and see if I get anywhere. Thanks for your answer.

The search can be very specific in FB. Did you add any special characters to your name, either before or after? Did you update your profile information, such as the city you live in as well? Sometimes, there are small things that can prevent people from finding you that can be fixed.

This is where similarity search kicks in. The vector representation for images is designed to produce similar vectors for similar images, where similar vectors are defined as those that are nearby in Euclidean space.

Deep1B comes with a small collection of query images, and the ground-truth similarity search results are provided from a brute-force algorithm on these images. Therefore, if we run a search algorithm we can evaluate the 1-recall@1 of the result.

Once the index type is chosen, indexing can begin. The algorithm processes the 1 billion vectors and puts them into an index. The index can be stored on disk or used immediately, and searches and additions/removals to the index can be interleaved.

When the index is ready, a set of search-time parameters can be set to adjust the method. For the sake of evaluation, we perform searches in a single thread. Here, we need to optimize the trade-off between accuracy and search time, since memory usage is fixed. This means, for example, being able to set parameters that give a 1-recall@1 of 40 percent in the least possible search time.

Fortunately, Faiss comes with an automatic tuning mechanism that scans the space of parameters and collects the ones that provide the best operating points; that is, the best possible search time given some accuracy, and vice versa. On Deep1B, the operating points can be visualized as a plot:

The Facebook AI Research team started developing Faiss in 2015, based on research results and a substantial engineering effort. For this library, we chose to focus on properly optimized versions of a few fundamental techniques. In particular, on the CPU side we make heavy use of:

For previous GPU implementations of similarity search, k-selection (finding the k-minimum or maximum elements) has been a performance problem, as typical CPU algorithms (heap selection, for example) are not GPU friendly. For Faiss GPU, we designed the fastest small k-selection algorithm (k

Much attention was paid to efficient tiling strategies and implementation of kernels used for approximate search. Multi-GPU support is provided by either sharding or replicating data; one is not limited to the memory available on a single GPU. Half-precision floating-point support (float16) is provided as well, with full float16 compute on supporting GPUs and intermediate float16 storage provided on earlier architectures. We found that encoding vectors as float16 yields speedup with almost no loss of accuracy.

Faiss (both C++ and Python) provides instances of Index. Each Index subclass implements an indexing structure, to which vectors can be added and searched. For example, IndexFlatL2 is a brute-force index that searches with L2 distances.

Facebook login is the world's largest social networking platform founded by mark Zuckerberg along with his fellows from Harvard college in 2004. facebook help you stay connected with your friend and family and love once.

Since Facebook removed the ability to remove yourself from search results altogether, we've put together a quick how-to guide to help you take control over what is featured on your Facebook profile and on Graph Search results. (Facebook also has a new video explaining how to control what shows up in Graph Search.)

Update: Based on a recent revelation that, despite locking down their own privacy settings, people were showing up in unwanted search results via friendships and relationships, we've added a few more privacy tweaks that help your friends avoid unwanted search results.

Note that tagging others in a photo by default gives their friends the ability to see that photo. Also note that removing a photo from your Timeline does not remove it from being searched, especially if it is someone else's photo.

In order to make sure that photo is not searchable, you must detag yourself or report the photo. Facebook has another great video about how to do just this. To detag yourself, click on a photo, and on the bottom of the picture click on "Options." Next, click "Report/Remove Tag." This gives you the option to remove your tag, as well as to notify the poster that you'd like the photo to be taken down.

In January, Facebook launched their new Graph Search experience, which works with information users themselves have put on Facebook to create more tailored and personal search results. We look at the impact on Facebook users and how to adapt your Page to take advantage of this new functionality.

One key difference between this search tool and search engines such as Google is that Facebook aims to provide an answer from within Facebook itself, rather than sending users to another site via a link.

The good news about Graph Search is that it should ultimately make your content more easily findable, attracting new viewers and fans. This should reward those with richer Facebook content and stronger connections with others on the social media platform. Since individual pieces of content on your page will be searchable, users and fans will be able to get more quickly to the things that specifically interest them (likely photos and videos).

As well as making your Page more open, if you also have a personal Profile on Facebook for friends and family, this may be a good time to tighten up your privacy settings or remove/untag content that may be inadvertently exposed by searches.

No matter where you are in your job search, FlexJobs is here to help. From our database of remote and flexible jobs to career coaching, a FlexJobs membership can power your job search. Take the tour and learn more.

Facebook and Manhattan prosecutors went to New York state's highest court Tuesday to settle a legal dispute over search warrants for users' accounts, a closely watched case with big implications for online privacy.

An attorney for Facebook told the judges that it must be allowed to object when law enforcement seeks search warrants for its users' information. Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance Jr. argued it is up to individual Facebook users to fight any effort to obtain personal information for criminal investigations.

Facebook attorney Thomas Dupree said the search warrants were unprecedented in their scope. Facebook regularly works with law enforcement but has to be allowed to object when it feels a search warrant is overly broad, he said.

Vance said anyone whose Facebook information is seized has the right to sue prosecutors for damages or challenge the admissibility of the evidence in court. He also noted that prosecutors must go before a judge before obtaining search warrants.

"Law enforcement is always going to be bumping up against people's privacy," he said. The search warrants for social media posts, he added, are "really no different than if we issued a search warrant into someone's house and took books and records or a car or a safe deposit box."

whopostedwhat.com is a non public Facebook keyword search for people who work in the public interest. It allows you to search keywords on specific dates. You are granted access because of your work. We do urge you to donate a small amount of money to keep the server running.

How is it working?
When you want to search on a specific date, you can search only for the year, only the month from a specific year or for a specific date. It is also possible to use two or more keywords like terror attack paris. You can also search in posts who got posted in between two specific dates. It is possible to search in between two years, in between months of different years and in between two specific dates. You can again use more keywords.

Note: The Instagram tool for searching a Location page for posts made on a specific date was removed on May 12, 2021 after it was discovered that Facebook had disabled the date-filtering feature it relied upon.

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