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Google TAKEOUT now.

Google TAKEOUT now.

You should probably be doing a Google Takeout once a month. Just FYI, the format of the data keeps changing. We have people tracking this, but since Google is modifying what data is included and moving it around, you may want earlier or later copies. If you have the hard drive space, keep them with dates so you can refer back to older copies when you get a chance.

The reason this is important is because all this data will most likely be gone after the close Google+. You'll probably have no way to look it up and if you ever wanted to migrate, this is the only way.

We are currently recommending JSON as the format to take out in, but that might change. You can't really go wrong with JSON, as it ports easily to other formats... and programmers like to use this format.

Questions? Ask in the comments.
https://takeout.google.com/settings/takeout

Comments

  1. The main problem with this is that the json implementation used by google is different from the standard one. As well as the other platforms too.. Fb, Twitter etc. Each of them uses its own "standard". I've read a very decent article some time ago about this case. They should use the unified normal standard according to the so called "data transparency laws directives" , but they don't.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Martina Neumayer JSON and "standard" in one sentence? You must be kidding ;-0

    But JSON is better for retrieving one's content than the HTML which Google exports. Or the HTML is even worse, if you want.

    seriot.ch - - Parsing JSON is a Minefield

    ReplyDelete
  3. Jürgen Christoffel I know that.. I meant that they should use some defined "standard" for data exporting/importing.

    ReplyDelete
  4. That article at seriot.ch is about parsing JSON at a base level. I'd expect G+ takeout's JSON to be sufficiently standard that any mainstream parser should construct the same data structure. But then given Google's difficulties with UTF filenames, maybe not!

    But that says nothing about Google's schema being totally different to the schemas required or produced by any other platform. This is the snowflake API problem where every platform uses JSON, but none of them use a common schema.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Julian Bond The point is that of the options currently available, the JSON Takeout is likely the best option for a programmer to import later.

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  6. Where can I switch the format from html to json?

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  7. Lars Hanisch Go here
    https://takeout.google.com/settings/takeout
    Click "select None"
    Scroll down to Google+ Circles and turn it on
    Click on the row
    Click on the drop down.
    Change vCard to JSON

    ReplyDelete
  8. Lars Hanisch there's a small "^" sign next to each on/off button, which allows you to see options, e.g. the export format to generate.

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  9. John Lewis My hope is Google is making Google+ json takeout compatible with ActivityPub.
    w3.org - ActivityPub

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  10. Mike Noyes Please do post feedback asking for this.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Jürgen Christoffel Julian Bond Thanks, I only saw "G+1", not the "Google+ Circles"...

    ReplyDelete
  12. Lars Hanisch There are several G+ items you need to enable.

    ReplyDelete
  13. I had no idea they kept changing the format. I've been postponing this because I'm still using G+ for now, and therefore accumulating more data.

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  14. Another factor: As people leave G+ or communities are deleted that content will disappear from G+. You simply will not be able to archive it.

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  15. I still don't understand why I should "takeout" my data. Why do I care what articles I shared two days ago let alone six years ago. Picture I shared on Google plus I have stored elsewhere, and at higher resolution.

    For someone who was using G+ as a blogging platform I can see it. Those people probably already have been backing up their data. For everyone else what's the point?

    ReplyDelete
  16. William Robison

    Well, it's a bit like insurance.

    You pay very little (in this case a few minutes to start it and some memory on your hard drive) for a potentially huge pay off (realizing there was some bit of information buried in your streams somewhere that you really need to find months/years later.)

    For me, I wrote a lot of fiction that I basically stored on my streams... not even thinking about the fact that they would one day disappear.

    ReplyDelete
  17. John Lewis you are some that I can see this being important to. I am guessing that you have been archiving your stories for long before the announcement.

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  18. William Robison Actually only sometimes, because I always knew I could find them on Google+... I was basically using G+ as my archive.

    ReplyDelete
  19. NB, I've added the Google Data Takeout link to the G+MM sidebar

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  20. I would love to do a Takeout every month, but downloading the file would be prohibitively slow on my primitive DSL Internet connection. I should probably at least do a Takeout once even if I don’t download, so I can start planning for how long the download will take.

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  21. Brian Holt Hawthorne You can store it to Google Drive, possibly other options.

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  22. Edward Morbius Excellent. I will check that out as an option.

    ReplyDelete
  23. Walking through the Google Data Takeout request process

    Posted to #PlexodusReddit just now. I'll add screenshots and finalise this later, I'm waiting for the archive to be created for now. I've selected "Save to (Google) Drive" as the storage option.

    old.reddit.com - Walking through the Google Data Takeout request process • r/plexodus

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  24. Edward Morbius Thanks. That lit a fire under me to submit my own. I’ve got only 5.1GB left in my Drive space. I darn well better not have five gig of G+ data!!

    Of course, if I run out of space, I’ll have to bite the bullet and upgrade my free legacy G Suite (options for me are $200/year for Basic for 4 users each getting 30GB, $400/year for Business for 4 users @ 1Tb, $500/year for Business for 5 users unlimited storage.

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  25. Brian Holt Hawthorne well, you don't need to store the file in your Google Drive. You can just opt to download it directly from Google Takeout instead. You might not get the easy syncing of the archives from Drive to your computer, but at least it won't count towards your storage quota that way.

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  26. Edward Morbius Good point - our content will disappear from any Community posts if community closes.

    ReplyDelete
  27. Filip H.F. Slagter I am far more limited on my download bandwidth. I’m on a slow DSL connection, so it takes most of the day to download 1GB, assuming the Verizon connection doesn’t go down.

    ReplyDelete
  28. Brian Holt Hawthorne ah, fair enough. When you have a stable quick home connection, it's easy to forget that not everyone has that luxury.
    I sure as hell don't miss the slow and unstable 1mbit or slower connection when I was at my parental home in a Dutch polder while I was providing care for my father.
    Or worse, when that unmetered adsl connection got shut down because the adsl provider no longer wanted to provide service in that area, and the only alternative left was a 4G connection. Sure, the 4G connection was faster, but it also had a tight monthly download size cap... I'd rather have a slower unmetered connection over a faster metered connection...

    Anyway, if you suffer from unstable connections, you might want to limit the archive size significantly. Better to have to redownload 1GB because of a terminated connection, than 50GB.

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  29. Filip H.F. Slagter I feel it here, 2nd world countries are not known for internet speed and reliability.

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  30. Maybe asking Google for SCP or SFTP support would be useful. That way you could sync your data directly to a VPS, though cheap VPSes usually don't come with a lot of storage either.
    Integration with Amazon AWS or Google's own Cloud Storage perhaps?

    ReplyDelete
  31. Being able to exclude media files from the Google+ Stream archive would make a big difference at least, as the archive size would significantly decrease.
    Or an option to sync all media files to a special album in Google Photos at 'High Quality' (the unlimited free storage quality setting, rather than the 'Original Quality' one), and have the json files include references to the individual files in there.

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  32. Filip H.F. Slagter Anyway, I am in the process of building a fiber to the home network for our town (I know, the lengths some people will go to just to get faster internet). So, my plan is to park the data in my Google Drive until I get my gigabitpersec connection in a year or so to replace my current 1-2Mbps connection.

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  33. Brian Holt Hawthorne Can I move in?

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  34. John Lewis It is rather cold up here in the hills. But plenty of houses for sale. Looks like the inexpensive fixer-upper finally sold, but there’s a nice house on Main Street: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/gyCmeYVTDob5dQkHBLOFa8bau7cpyZKu0PwYvb7mNwGTzZxXG_RCB2_okHH12OKT084gjfkKFSbmEcxS8QZnh0pkp3pi9TA1J11u=s0

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  35. John Lewis It is rather cold up here in the hills. But plenty of houses for sale. Looks like the inexpensive fixer-upper finally sold, but there’s a nice house on Main Street: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/_g6YwTKU4O_vO_fHAoxGPDzGNYS8lYATzovhpT40t1TpWmW77mebx6jFuhK1X8VBuWX8CKdc-KL84adZwCDyRnWSB8C8zN12dDn8=s0

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  36. John Lewis It is rather cold up here in the hills. But plenty of houses for sale. Looks like the inexpensive fixer-upper finally sold, but there’s a nice house on Main Street: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/JruIMUYfPxPsdAh81mFdqOrhs4SyqrgprRn3uurXyiEyF59Hn8CzS2eI1Hna5jEHJTfs-mcwcu3ZZQoVA7SNHJRUmFGL5HcnMnn2=s0

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  37. John Lewis It is rather cold up here in the hills. But plenty of houses for sale. Looks like the inexpensive fixer-upper finally sold, but there’s a nice house on Main Street: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/4_R5CRwZHLU2DbQg7RkSA0i9Idwa596uSBWfswrLKICkZsqQ3Sdh9qMcfjceSF6VNkHMED37xelFRPERxiRSigGMn0QNBTyNtM1u=s0

    ReplyDelete
  38. John Lewis It is rather cold up here in the hills. But plenty of houses for sale. Looks like the inexpensive fixer-upper finally sold, but there’s a nice house on Main Street: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/FqGBxvHSdy2_gLG_GZ0frDzqIt-1Cs7QaSgMMFTl_Q5lVBRxTwDFZqrQq3T84xV_9aCcR3Oo1qtpa6RoVHcW84s6E8YdlMpKIiCO=s0

    ReplyDelete
  39. John Lewis It is rather cold up here in the hills. But plenty of houses for sale. Looks like the inexpensive fixer-upper finally sold, but there’s a nice house on Main Street: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/7M_obObPDtidfBXvcEKSx3vFbv4MPpfCfUHwCSY3WqFMKsnYC6_rtzmrAAMOnb6yyRfmPQuevPYbcQ5UUBiNNIKNrP7Gb0MujrFw=s0

    ReplyDelete
  40. John Lewis It is rather cold up here in the hills. But plenty of houses for sale. Looks like the inexpensive fixer-upper finally sold, but there’s a nice house on Main Street: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/XCX09yCRorgcgr9RSycjloSq34cPi6WcdZBLVLXbguYZABu79q-dKdXvDISrYJxoiO9IMsyG17lOl9yF2l9vmzW-3Yrk0If_gyEJ=s0

    ReplyDelete
  41. John Lewis It is rather cold up here in the hills. But plenty of houses for sale. Looks like the inexpensive fixer-upper finally sold, but there’s a nice house on Main Street: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/GWiSowrNdGqo9D4Mta0W8pcGGi1NeoXASedeEQ_87l4gr05dKlY_yU__ACwMUz9P8HRqP6w8kxI9JZ1KZKRNzolEA3n0WBycNWRr=s0

    ReplyDelete
  42. John Lewis It is rather cold up here in the hills. But plenty of houses for sale. Looks like the inexpensive fixer-upper finally sold, but there’s a nice house on Main Street: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/7ucAec0YCHMLVirD1D9gs39B-KuGHwjVPgcgV_YmZQ5NfFcwg_L9DkGLOw19Psf3sfaHqMY4Z12ydocolb0MjGeuaVaKfKAm9kom=s0

    ReplyDelete
  43. John Lewis It is rather cold up here in the hills. But plenty of houses for sale. Looks like the inexpensive fixer-upper finally sold, but there’s a nice house on Main Street: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/O12_Y8GRVSgLiIYkkV5E4FINFoCnh2xwfPHjtC70QKpdQo77_28R1HBz7WsWP7QScpZiLRSBwnenDRYVwhWzG6UxU43Rc8xH6_He=s0

    ReplyDelete
  44. John Lewis It is rather cold up here in the hills. But plenty of houses for sale. Looks like the inexpensive fixer-upper finally sold, but there’s a nice house on Main Street: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/PE7TW55HO4la4M3AOjiQqZR6lX7-YqshtZ_172DbUe_l408Lu24yhaP990Bv0QwYlGlig2JMR99v8lmMbT50uuVyp-HgH2Vl4USY=s0

    ReplyDelete
  45. John Lewis It is rather cold up here in the hills. But plenty of houses for sale. Looks like the inexpensive fixer-upper finally sold, but there’s a nice house on Main Street: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-jqxMzVqdDYuHA4a0DFS3QsMcZxTcQAMGDPEGoZkqKXaTzvswpQI6jvZoYXnngujVDDnWJVb3ooLSqV47d6H5-qvhj64f4MMJpHy=s0

    ReplyDelete
  46. John Lewis It is rather cold up here in the hills. But plenty of houses for sale. Looks like the inexpensive fixer-upper finally sold, but there’s a nice house on Main Street: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/nWnbq8ug4TEas58luIKQd1mlyc9ZZS8d0yPPH8toM9OrbTp70rRgglfu3jQt_5fh5aTySyZ2YSCgBJyC2Z8tJNqfM6ICyZIbgnB2=s0

    ReplyDelete
  47. John Lewis It is rather cold up here in the hills. But plenty of houses for sale. Looks like the inexpensive fixer-upper finally sold, but there’s a nice house on Main Street: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/ktJN-1gVDm8aRkq2ScgpE0sEipTPLKffxLqyr0ZDvumGXjA_LJNVYnVD0FMOTkNXFjLd02E9KPxhdDs1j-k9BlnIdxmVaOlRHzCa=s0

    ReplyDelete
  48. John Lewis It is rather cold up here in the hills. But plenty of houses for sale. Looks like the inexpensive fixer-upper finally sold, but there’s a nice house on Main Street: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/mlXJl8WIuhtyASexIMnYVkBvsLQRLzjzRsaeWSpj-qQUMk8J_prReoHR_XRtruVdo8hNqekS3oAYxWNUrQtkDhW-NsXz9zUOjXRs=s0

    ReplyDelete
  49. John Lewis It is rather cold up here in the hills. But plenty of houses for sale. Looks like the inexpensive fixer-upper finally sold, but there’s a nice house on Main Street: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/d5n7roInaBbQyVGIblO5QbSrDxSTcuqxWB0NuZzcoigCl2CZYlWXzKmsrzdy7e-_HmlEztDXrkm5CbQaduQXTqahbrG38RTeKgA-=s0

    ReplyDelete
  50. John Lewis It is rather cold up here in the hills. But plenty of houses for sale. Looks like the inexpensive fixer-upper finally sold, but there’s a nice house on Main Street: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/9ILQj4EwwS6Kc7LRq6elxBOwYCmC2ztXkuqyoRaxOzgkuweGxB-I3s_-DBBhmUkrZoZ05V_pLj-MoVL5d80bbyKCfE86TTaGhlFj=s0

    ReplyDelete
  51. John Lewis It is rather cold up here in the hills. But plenty of houses for sale. Looks like the inexpensive fixer-upper finally sold, but there’s a nice house on Main Street: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/WclR_dz1KRXeEBfsRTbGZn2GXIG21R25qJzoMwQ75ziN4QlqdJBw_-3bG7Szm_x8RvAGiCf1ZqAiF3Fs_Ss9UxKkVCMwNpZYIYNg=s0

    ReplyDelete
  52. John Lewis It is rather cold up here in the hills. But plenty of houses for sale. Looks like the inexpensive fixer-upper finally sold, but there’s a nice house on Main Street: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/V1UpzoM89sycxDzLDVWHI2OWt6dd5vlc0awjoR49JipRud5d3-b1Y91H-mAyAeV49SG_6sWMe7aUJUA9Md559HqDkOvdgMjGy9Ku=s0

    ReplyDelete
  53. John Lewis It is rather cold up here in the hills. But plenty of houses for sale. Looks like the inexpensive fixer-upper finally sold, but there’s a nice house on Main Street: https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/XMTkmC9RKEJ7wf9u7aQnkJk-up2F29HNT7vkQrPjGLxZSSytyJK25z_LnQNMY-Kd69-fSCXyDxIFuU8IQ7TF3006YsLKmnpQEgVu=s0

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  54. As for moving in with me, we have a pretty small place, and my younger son is living in the apartment over the garage, so I’m afraid I don’t have the room.

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  55. Brian Holt Hawthorne btw, rather than upgrading your Google storage, you could also consider using one of the other supported cloud storage providers.
    For instance, OneDrive would be 6,99 USD monthly for 1Tb... or 50GB for 1,99 USD monthly: https://onedrive.live.com/about/en-us/plans/
    At 1TB, that's quite a bit cheaper than Google's solution, and you wouldn't need to upgrade your legacy free G Suite account. (Worth considering btw, because AFAIK you can't downgrade your G Suite again to a free legacy account: https://support.google.com/a/answer/60229?hl=en — Also, a BIG WARNING: https://dev.to/lawgimenez/g-suite-horror-story-4g6p)

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  56. Filip H.F. Slagter That is only helpful if there is a way to directly transfer my G+ Takeout data to the other storage provider without having to download it and re-upload it. Otherwise K might as well just store it locally.

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  57. Filip H.F. Slagter That “horror” story is full of so many misstatements about what G Suite is and how it works, that it is hard for me to take seriously. I can’t even figure out what he is saying. He says he upgraded his gmail.com address to g Suite. There is no way to do this, unless you create a g Suite domain, then transfer the saved email from a gmail.com account into an account in that g Suite domain. And his description of g Suite as a way of unifiying your gmail? What does that even mean other than being completely wrong?

    ReplyDelete
  58. Brian Holt Hawthorne Google Takeout allows for directly storing the takeout archive(s) on a variety of cloud storage platforms. These include:
    ★ Google Drive
    ★ OneDrive
    ★ Dropbox
    ★ Box
    (Some of them might have max archive size limits though.)
    Note: I've never used any other solution than just the 'Send download link via email' option.

    To use the data though, your new social media home would actually need to support connecting to one or more of these cloud storage providers. I'm guessing Dropbox and Drive would be the most popular options for web developers to implement/support. Then again, I'd strongly advice against allowing that anyway, as these archives likely will contain private data, such as non-public posts.
    So, indeed, you'd likely have to manually download, extract and filter your data before it's of any use to another social media silo.https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/JGWeqge74VjKr5hEE_2jE1_gkYXtfxlpDlqAepadLuzlvVmSilHhAINSzI-J39nCgFM6JYBIQHjmgyNnFOVP8hIJFDSfE6xjXLAQ=s0

    ReplyDelete
  59. Brian Holt Hawthorne Google Takeout allows for directly storing the takeout archive(s) on a variety of cloud storage platforms. These include:
    ★ Google Drive
    ★ OneDrive
    ★ Dropbox
    ★ Box
    (Some of them might have max archive size limits though.)
    Note: I've never used any other solution than just the 'Send download link via email' option.

    To use the data though, your new social media home would actually need to support connecting to one or more of these cloud storage providers. I'm guessing Dropbox and Drive would be the most popular options for web developers to implement/support. Then again, I'd strongly advice against allowing that anyway, as these archives likely will contain private data, such as non-public posts.
    So, indeed, you'd likely have to manually download, extract and filter your data before it's of any use to another social media silo.https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/WhANqT4OfL2BzdEIwViM0-BPYpOqH2XqSzAPbxjAhFfBdW72-3kc2nPTNN8g5jn28wCNMBF2sWqXAIXQUecHvyoM10wcD4-bO4WW=s0

    ReplyDelete
  60. Brian Holt Hawthorne Google Takeout allows for directly storing the takeout archive(s) on a variety of cloud storage platforms. These include:
    ★ Google Drive
    ★ OneDrive
    ★ Dropbox
    ★ Box
    (Some of them might have max archive size limits though.)
    Note: I've never used any other solution than just the 'Send download link via email' option.

    To use the data though, your new social media home would actually need to support connecting to one or more of these cloud storage providers. I'm guessing Dropbox and Drive would be the most popular options for web developers to implement/support. Then again, I'd strongly advice against allowing that anyway, as these archives likely will contain private data, such as non-public posts.
    So, indeed, you'd likely have to manually download, extract and filter your data before it's of any use to another social media silo.https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/lMn9tdyxW4mNTM6dX9V9vsOYx89G0F8VyW1YeiSYS0FMRdV6TW1ryYjNTVwyJLolG3KBVpxvynjzf8KMa2I_hmuAqs12xD60WgRF=s0

    ReplyDelete
  61. Brian Holt Hawthorne Google Takeout allows for directly storing the takeout archive(s) on a variety of cloud storage platforms. These include:
    ★ Google Drive
    ★ OneDrive
    ★ Dropbox
    ★ Box
    (Some of them might have max archive size limits though.)
    Note: I've never used any other solution than just the 'Send download link via email' option.

    To use the data though, your new social media home would actually need to support connecting to one or more of these cloud storage providers. I'm guessing Dropbox and Drive would be the most popular options for web developers to implement/support. Then again, I'd strongly advice against allowing that anyway, as these archives likely will contain private data, such as non-public posts.
    So, indeed, you'd likely have to manually download, extract and filter your data before it's of any use to another social media silo.https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/ZMBw7oJkofLyoTKYa3PiwaPrbIuSsxuaMesQXiJSQ-x5vXVy46QW9LFpMvpjuEKreKhch_B9LWjL4F7xVNbozlGOoxshZhP_bkJQ=s0

    ReplyDelete
  62. Brian Holt Hawthorne Google Takeout allows for directly storing the takeout archive(s) on a variety of cloud storage platforms. These include:
    ★ Google Drive
    ★ OneDrive
    ★ Dropbox
    ★ Box
    (Some of them might have max archive size limits though.)
    Note: I've never used any other solution than just the 'Send download link via email' option.

    To use the data though, your new social media home would actually need to support connecting to one or more of these cloud storage providers. I'm guessing Dropbox and Drive would be the most popular options for web developers to implement/support. Then again, I'd strongly advice against allowing that anyway, as these archives likely will contain private data, such as non-public posts.
    So, indeed, you'd likely have to manually download, extract and filter your data before it's of any use to another social media silo.https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/K3QDu9nUtrhVsxl26Kgi68Qh9_XVQKCC7GXI1CDqIR7nQnZzYlu1FK3poEZM7Q66kSLdxWlp_1q2oXhJ33ZcSOoddN1NOIBlwMs3=s0

    ReplyDelete
  63. Brian Holt Hawthorne Google Takeout allows for directly storing the takeout archive(s) on a variety of cloud storage platforms. These include:
    ★ Google Drive
    ★ OneDrive
    ★ Dropbox
    ★ Box
    (Some of them might have max archive size limits though.)
    Note: I've never used any other solution than just the 'Send download link via email' option.

    To use the data though, your new social media home would actually need to support connecting to one or more of these cloud storage providers. I'm guessing Dropbox and Drive would be the most popular options for web developers to implement/support. Then again, I'd strongly advice against allowing that anyway, as these archives likely will contain private data, such as non-public posts.
    So, indeed, you'd likely have to manually download, extract and filter your data before it's of any use to another social media silo.https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/NQkAyO0o4ucXQgX88te4_pm4gtGJ8oiUD-tml_EljSMm2IwEgLP-f9pcc0apgXy5J7Lcd5dn8RK5advs84m9q9xHTH4e0sjrkZy9=s0

    ReplyDelete
  64. Brian Holt Hawthorne Google Takeout allows for directly storing the takeout archive(s) on a variety of cloud storage platforms. These include:
    ★ Google Drive
    ★ OneDrive
    ★ Dropbox
    ★ Box
    (Some of them might have max archive size limits though.)
    Note: I've never used any other solution than just the 'Send download link via email' option.

    To use the data though, your new social media home would actually need to support connecting to one or more of these cloud storage providers. I'm guessing Dropbox and Drive would be the most popular options for web developers to implement/support. Then again, I'd strongly advice against allowing that anyway, as these archives likely will contain private data, such as non-public posts.
    So, indeed, you'd likely have to manually download, extract and filter your data before it's of any use to another social media silo.https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/lAsts-6BQTLuV3jQIK1gpTYpbmvH4TOVBFwBgZO9bEKwd19xG-gIwn_wcAQdHjE7xq0psm6EI_D-TN-m-0rH-BUfiilewFtW-a6E=s0

    ReplyDelete
  65. Brian Holt Hawthorne Google Takeout allows for directly storing the takeout archive(s) on a variety of cloud storage platforms. These include:
    ★ Google Drive
    ★ OneDrive
    ★ Dropbox
    ★ Box
    (Some of them might have max archive size limits though.)
    Note: I've never used any other solution than just the 'Send download link via email' option.

    To use the data though, your new social media home would actually need to support connecting to one or more of these cloud storage providers. I'm guessing Dropbox and Drive would be the most popular options for web developers to implement/support. Then again, I'd strongly advice against allowing that anyway, as these archives likely will contain private data, such as non-public posts.
    So, indeed, you'd likely have to manually download, extract and filter your data before it's of any use to another social media silo.https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/1BMFxh8VTlQEUjrXi3sNlLK2ubWJobZEPmvzx0syTwmsd8nf7bWoT7NEKcZ_tQN77euPQErPCk7alNP-Rz-N0qupGQg8CyJEqnrk=s0

    ReplyDelete
  66. Brian Holt Hawthorne Google Takeout allows for directly storing the takeout archive(s) on a variety of cloud storage platforms. These include:
    ★ Google Drive
    ★ OneDrive
    ★ Dropbox
    ★ Box
    (Some of them might have max archive size limits though.)
    Note: I've never used any other solution than just the 'Send download link via email' option.

    To use the data though, your new social media home would actually need to support connecting to one or more of these cloud storage providers. I'm guessing Dropbox and Drive would be the most popular options for web developers to implement/support. Then again, I'd strongly advice against allowing that anyway, as these archives likely will contain private data, such as non-public posts.
    So, indeed, you'd likely have to manually download, extract and filter your data before it's of any use to another social media silo.https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/ZfN2SBJAwvc-QBovQbOh1MujVPyksP8Z29zgbNRLOUADV8CJm6hopv0op-Fre2ex2K3vLdznZiEbX__7jA5K1-2fK_sQPzDe8hJv=s0

    ReplyDelete
  67. Brian Holt Hawthorne Google Takeout allows for directly storing the takeout archive(s) on a variety of cloud storage platforms. These include:
    ★ Google Drive
    ★ OneDrive
    ★ Dropbox
    ★ Box
    (Some of them might have max archive size limits though.)
    Note: I've never used any other solution than just the 'Send download link via email' option.

    To use the data though, your new social media home would actually need to support connecting to one or more of these cloud storage providers. I'm guessing Dropbox and Drive would be the most popular options for web developers to implement/support. Then again, I'd strongly advice against allowing that anyway, as these archives likely will contain private data, such as non-public posts.
    So, indeed, you'd likely have to manually download, extract and filter your data before it's of any use to another social media silo.https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/2OkyGM-Jx-yfzOFllcGr2pD72NogmeCN6ZtjfSNvNbT2Y1CvJP8CdqYZj8LI7aG6MPkO9bwbBH-Fi2gM9GUmTx56bhXZFxFCrbQO=s0

    ReplyDelete
  68. Brian Holt Hawthorne Google Takeout allows for directly storing the takeout archive(s) on a variety of cloud storage platforms. These include:
    ★ Google Drive
    ★ OneDrive
    ★ Dropbox
    ★ Box
    (Some of them might have max archive size limits though.)
    Note: I've never used any other solution than just the 'Send download link via email' option.

    To use the data though, your new social media home would actually need to support connecting to one or more of these cloud storage providers. I'm guessing Dropbox and Drive would be the most popular options for web developers to implement/support. Then again, I'd strongly advice against allowing that anyway, as these archives likely will contain private data, such as non-public posts.
    So, indeed, you'd likely have to manually download, extract and filter your data before it's of any use to another social media silo.https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/1hcE6s8oN1rQr9ofWgZtkd5SywemLRjayu7ZP4yG8nqbrpHq_m2yRSmU6IfgT-KUjY79uQJJ99XpwCKQXEBLrHeDkanx2_e-kZd1=s0

    ReplyDelete
  69. Brian Holt Hawthorne Google Takeout allows for directly storing the takeout archive(s) on a variety of cloud storage platforms. These include:
    ★ Google Drive
    ★ OneDrive
    ★ Dropbox
    ★ Box
    (Some of them might have max archive size limits though.)
    Note: I've never used any other solution than just the 'Send download link via email' option.

    To use the data though, your new social media home would actually need to support connecting to one or more of these cloud storage providers. I'm guessing Dropbox and Drive would be the most popular options for web developers to implement/support. Then again, I'd strongly advice against allowing that anyway, as these archives likely will contain private data, such as non-public posts.
    So, indeed, you'd likely have to manually download, extract and filter your data before it's of any use to another social media silo.https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/tpDqHdBHWlzQbmwtnFkPZPAOrDp4p_Zcmk8j_NUHfXftpIC4pcukdAeDynb-GIVbiYMXM-oRIA_Q6l6Vk8izXUbco2savIJfDQuS=s0

    ReplyDelete
  70. Brian Holt Hawthorne Google Takeout allows for directly storing the takeout archive(s) on a variety of cloud storage platforms. These include:
    ★ Google Drive
    ★ OneDrive
    ★ Dropbox
    ★ Box
    (Some of them might have max archive size limits though.)
    Note: I've never used any other solution than just the 'Send download link via email' option.

    To use the data though, your new social media home would actually need to support connecting to one or more of these cloud storage providers. I'm guessing Dropbox and Drive would be the most popular options for web developers to implement/support. Then again, I'd strongly advice against allowing that anyway, as these archives likely will contain private data, such as non-public posts.
    So, indeed, you'd likely have to manually download, extract and filter your data before it's of any use to another social media silo.https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/rRJGMZRvSAC9BPxQHCw5sAs8NXXBHGHOEg-2qvGdmTPUC4DpiUr3gx2_SwMiSvvGf4tyzfpp0rThstud14KGg0oSOY5tu6OdAPMs=s0

    ReplyDelete
  71. Brian Holt Hawthorne Google Takeout allows for directly storing the takeout archive(s) on a variety of cloud storage platforms. These include:
    ★ Google Drive
    ★ OneDrive
    ★ Dropbox
    ★ Box
    (Some of them might have max archive size limits though.)
    Note: I've never used any other solution than just the 'Send download link via email' option.

    To use the data though, your new social media home would actually need to support connecting to one or more of these cloud storage providers. I'm guessing Dropbox and Drive would be the most popular options for web developers to implement/support. Then again, I'd strongly advice against allowing that anyway, as these archives likely will contain private data, such as non-public posts.
    So, indeed, you'd likely have to manually download, extract and filter your data before it's of any use to another social media silo.https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-uAZYmkpdTEP8hxdqDAdH4B_8oU05xWhnhuU8M4zBz86rEfhc9FiExPdSwzNbHWp7YH1uQjYnxd_i2PJn5SzdyRUy7SC7zC4tfrQ=s0

    ReplyDelete
  72. Brian Holt Hawthorne Google Takeout allows for directly storing the takeout archive(s) on a variety of cloud storage platforms. These include:
    ★ Google Drive
    ★ OneDrive
    ★ Dropbox
    ★ Box
    (Some of them might have max archive size limits though.)
    Note: I've never used any other solution than just the 'Send download link via email' option.

    To use the data though, your new social media home would actually need to support connecting to one or more of these cloud storage providers. I'm guessing Dropbox and Drive would be the most popular options for web developers to implement/support. Then again, I'd strongly advice against allowing that anyway, as these archives likely will contain private data, such as non-public posts.
    So, indeed, you'd likely have to manually download, extract and filter your data before it's of any use to another social media silo.https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/8KHX73iRCjNSNAc1F0FqiNI7q-7TS-piUxKM6JngAzBTTp2HseMAmZ8HQ0hzYOTnF0eAgEvLuIor5VJB4IlLzakWJXO4qXm5KVia=s0

    ReplyDelete
  73. Brian Holt Hawthorne Google Takeout allows for directly storing the takeout archive(s) on a variety of cloud storage platforms. These include:
    ★ Google Drive
    ★ OneDrive
    ★ Dropbox
    ★ Box
    (Some of them might have max archive size limits though.)
    Note: I've never used any other solution than just the 'Send download link via email' option.

    To use the data though, your new social media home would actually need to support connecting to one or more of these cloud storage providers. I'm guessing Dropbox and Drive would be the most popular options for web developers to implement/support. Then again, I'd strongly advice against allowing that anyway, as these archives likely will contain private data, such as non-public posts.
    So, indeed, you'd likely have to manually download, extract and filter your data before it's of any use to another social media silo.https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/a7dCmz4_SpKCNrEOCenZeCPPPgT9164Cshf3PfsBj1jdWz3J8YCM_L1_0Io-k423F7KSloo79EkhXwxeFXNKt8rWMDUKxb2XCU9o=s0

    ReplyDelete
  74. Brian Holt Hawthorne Google Takeout allows for directly storing the takeout archive(s) on a variety of cloud storage platforms. These include:
    ★ Google Drive
    ★ OneDrive
    ★ Dropbox
    ★ Box
    (Some of them might have max archive size limits though.)
    Note: I've never used any other solution than just the 'Send download link via email' option.

    To use the data though, your new social media home would actually need to support connecting to one or more of these cloud storage providers. I'm guessing Dropbox and Drive would be the most popular options for web developers to implement/support. Then again, I'd strongly advice against allowing that anyway, as these archives likely will contain private data, such as non-public posts.
    So, indeed, you'd likely have to manually download, extract and filter your data before it's of any use to another social media silo.https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/pes0FJ4WfprIP3vB5TiUQ-hToEKnIKQuaURg2uGqHDR_9Q3P-Nf7L8PpuY2mWIexaWBcfK1UZOHksGubDjH_URHnCghDanTCwVsv=s0

    ReplyDelete
  75. Brian Holt Hawthorne Google Takeout allows for directly storing the takeout archive(s) on a variety of cloud storage platforms. These include:
    ★ Google Drive
    ★ OneDrive
    ★ Dropbox
    ★ Box
    (Some of them might have max archive size limits though.)
    Note: I've never used any other solution than just the 'Send download link via email' option.

    To use the data though, your new social media home would actually need to support connecting to one or more of these cloud storage providers. I'm guessing Dropbox and Drive would be the most popular options for web developers to implement/support. Then again, I'd strongly advice against allowing that anyway, as these archives likely will contain private data, such as non-public posts.
    So, indeed, you'd likely have to manually download, extract and filter your data before it's of any use to another social media silo.https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/i9iP3bnbzXaZODaSlBVjnvqjSf65xo5kd2kABi6raTcK8AEYZtV44BROC5hn_JgOhRXvRPHWQvK0gLd8rQaJ7rMONr5K4NN5Fhrp=s0

    ReplyDelete
  76. Brian Holt Hawthorne Google Takeout allows for directly storing the takeout archive(s) on a variety of cloud storage platforms. These include:
    ★ Google Drive
    ★ OneDrive
    ★ Dropbox
    ★ Box
    (Some of them might have max archive size limits though.)
    Note: I've never used any other solution than just the 'Send download link via email' option.

    To use the data though, your new social media home would actually need to support connecting to one or more of these cloud storage providers. I'm guessing Dropbox and Drive would be the most popular options for web developers to implement/support. Then again, I'd strongly advice against allowing that anyway, as these archives likely will contain private data, such as non-public posts.
    So, indeed, you'd likely have to manually download, extract and filter your data before it's of any use to another social media silo.https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/wmQ8d_9TX5g3-K6D4ZzvpCiUw5DRivQV1-b6UP8b7QkCU1DnpqdnzG7-sVWhMzwBUHqf4Yb531pAniURgDvhsyxfpVUBzGJDLNpn=s0

    ReplyDelete
  77. Brian Holt Hawthorne Google Takeout allows for directly storing the takeout archive(s) on a variety of cloud storage platforms. These include:
    ★ Google Drive
    ★ OneDrive
    ★ Dropbox
    ★ Box
    (Some of them might have max archive size limits though.)
    Note: I've never used any other solution than just the 'Send download link via email' option.

    To use the data though, your new social media home would actually need to support connecting to one or more of these cloud storage providers. I'm guessing Dropbox and Drive would be the most popular options for web developers to implement/support. Then again, I'd strongly advice against allowing that anyway, as these archives likely will contain private data, such as non-public posts.
    So, indeed, you'd likely have to manually download, extract and filter your data before it's of any use to another social media silo.https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/cVeh4FO8H1irtYa-8hjimXsbPfu1D3A9iA_SK2LJuUHKPGfqclu0ZKUqx5Pi6btY7EnSdSBODSWg_OzYxSm_3Lkrp5oxEAVO0rVX=s0

    ReplyDelete
  78. Brian Holt Hawthorne as for the horror story:
    I'm guessing they meant 'gmail' as the Google Mail interface to the $user@your.domain.example addresses.
    While the 'personal gmail' is indeed confusing, perhaps they meant their mail address for personal use, or didn't consider the Google Apps an enterprise service when it was still free? Assumptions though...

    Anyway, the warning that I took from it is that once you upgrade your free legacy account and use it beyond the trial limitations, there's no way back. And it's indeed not clear to me what will actually happen to $user@your.domain.example e-mail addresses should you no longer be able/willing to pay for G Suite. I'm guessing that those will no longer be accessible, and you'll have to change the MX records for your domain to point to another mail provider.

    ReplyDelete
  79. Filip H.F. Slagter Yes, I assume that is the case. My domain has been all over the place since I first registered it back in 1990. It’s been on a server in my closet, somewhere else, at a friend’s house, Insont remember where when his house burned down, and eventually I landed it at google.

    It’s my domain, so if I ever abandon G Suite, there are plenty of options for me to host it elsewhere. Google is just the best combination of convenience, security, performance, and features that I’ve found. The fact that it is mostly free doesn’t hurt, but even if I decide to start paying Google, it will still be a damned good deal. I even moved my domain registrations there when I shutdown my reseller business this year. The price for me to register a domain at Google is close to what my wholesale cost was through OpenSRS!!

    ReplyDelete
  80. While a few weeks ago I was able to export my data successfully without errors, the past 2 attempts unfortunately haven't been without errors again...
    I'm wondering what is causing these errors again now... Haven't been able yet to download my archives yet though, as I'm currently stuck on a subpar internet connection, so I don't know what the errors exactly are... https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/yc7Xdh7zYlWnI7V13CAMXrqgZ0yu8CWXCOpKKa8uFayzLWUdL2D--HJzb3W07bsatNc9_cihgSSm3BjkX3zsbXYRCiJaUqKJq8YP=s0

    ReplyDelete
  81. While a few weeks ago I was able to export my data successfully without errors, the past 2 attempts unfortunately haven't been without errors again...
    I'm wondering what is causing these errors again now... Haven't been able yet to download my archives yet though, as I'm currently stuck on a subpar internet connection, so I don't know what the errors exactly are... https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/UoGgUIIHKAGhdL9fMEQLICMUlg9kMhy6ntsdHdxBxLl6ikzwmu1A11_xz69iRuiNbv4K24prghwZDs9j5gPwWgWu-SQhi-LzQ2TJ=s0

    ReplyDelete
  82. While a few weeks ago I was able to export my data successfully without errors, the past 2 attempts unfortunately haven't been without errors again...
    I'm wondering what is causing these errors again now... Haven't been able yet to download my archives yet though, as I'm currently stuck on a subpar internet connection, so I don't know what the errors exactly are... https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/rEKB8Om1zuGEKsJpflmM1o1MhJ_HdYCpU29-9fy0XqlZjsUIpzAhmJaZUnBD9BmgcVL_J0ZlMX-DgpAAN6T_YItUgQO6irmc0Ztz=s0

    ReplyDelete
  83. While a few weeks ago I was able to export my data successfully without errors, the past 2 attempts unfortunately haven't been without errors again...
    I'm wondering what is causing these errors again now... Haven't been able yet to download my archives yet though, as I'm currently stuck on a subpar internet connection, so I don't know what the errors exactly are... https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/TSuaFJC08699KKYE10aD99ipqIapZZTP8WxXm49nAN8pRzUtW8D24alGgIQVr42Md_q8j7__tN4umyPofcEE_SER51NwRrtB4FDK=s0

    ReplyDelete
  84. While a few weeks ago I was able to export my data successfully without errors, the past 2 attempts unfortunately haven't been without errors again...
    I'm wondering what is causing these errors again now... Haven't been able yet to download my archives yet though, as I'm currently stuck on a subpar internet connection, so I don't know what the errors exactly are... https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/ma15GfQv-f_MATp1Kl1-t7y9HW_EsP_6cschG-2kwKqJUMHA59GHJjnYhX7vgccoAzgEJ6LBfQKW6UFvLZtyaC0EKU_z0qrG4W-W=s0

    ReplyDelete
  85. While a few weeks ago I was able to export my data successfully without errors, the past 2 attempts unfortunately haven't been without errors again...
    I'm wondering what is causing these errors again now... Haven't been able yet to download my archives yet though, as I'm currently stuck on a subpar internet connection, so I don't know what the errors exactly are... https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/pAu0Xe_48xHu_S29Zd3ghXGvE_kVPTPGFqeBMMKMTe46E9Ncikqv1_xtlQBzqh-lU1rOQgEcMNtIoFAzFqo-h9t8g-K1_SO4rebs=s0

    ReplyDelete
  86. While a few weeks ago I was able to export my data successfully without errors, the past 2 attempts unfortunately haven't been without errors again...
    I'm wondering what is causing these errors again now... Haven't been able yet to download my archives yet though, as I'm currently stuck on a subpar internet connection, so I don't know what the errors exactly are... https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/3WYutXuBBlqgGzJ50YHVMPJqCjMUgfkNr35fJ4RxcuPtfujvYwdGR0g6HbDIyh0eJqg4BXYGbpnWB9wbM5BOY9kZ_38NGcsTl-63=s0

    ReplyDelete
  87. While a few weeks ago I was able to export my data successfully without errors, the past 2 attempts unfortunately haven't been without errors again...
    I'm wondering what is causing these errors again now... Haven't been able yet to download my archives yet though, as I'm currently stuck on a subpar internet connection, so I don't know what the errors exactly are... https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/pzg5aBn3RqDQrZKlnvRABugVye8CJ-7vP6ls3Ir0gSX2ue5t87oTt0zDawJvLsWEHjmeEMNyfNhhgIWBa6qtDJQbMmdXRGFSqD4H=s0

    ReplyDelete
  88. While a few weeks ago I was able to export my data successfully without errors, the past 2 attempts unfortunately haven't been without errors again...
    I'm wondering what is causing these errors again now... Haven't been able yet to download my archives yet though, as I'm currently stuck on a subpar internet connection, so I don't know what the errors exactly are... https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/WxrQmpDHLdAuhDOwmHcREAz49JFD4e65VOsBexbiVSsx4LZLArn6pcWTnOA4tVU3fipwSAaLMfc3WkX2AfGiiu-qn0G18H8TIRLE=s0

    ReplyDelete
  89. While a few weeks ago I was able to export my data successfully without errors, the past 2 attempts unfortunately haven't been without errors again...
    I'm wondering what is causing these errors again now... Haven't been able yet to download my archives yet though, as I'm currently stuck on a subpar internet connection, so I don't know what the errors exactly are... https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/g24Tfcp6pI3CENcWIs4_lQVu_D8Z5hm7WuaXmGWHzyNZLZfIwMiAI50n41R7nKWexgEtUHFil_CoRtcUL21EH_rPsEAfA4d2Km3n=s0

    ReplyDelete
  90. While a few weeks ago I was able to export my data successfully without errors, the past 2 attempts unfortunately haven't been without errors again...
    I'm wondering what is causing these errors again now... Haven't been able yet to download my archives yet though, as I'm currently stuck on a subpar internet connection, so I don't know what the errors exactly are... https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-PeDVI1CxWJ2kOqDsN4WwfW0BqQYtXejoz8dmqsdjxWFXLFz9ogRE9T05tjNgpJSbMqaY2M7aUuEbQ_jzGKdvEg-uZXRbc72cDOU=s0

    ReplyDelete
  91. While a few weeks ago I was able to export my data successfully without errors, the past 2 attempts unfortunately haven't been without errors again...
    I'm wondering what is causing these errors again now... Haven't been able yet to download my archives yet though, as I'm currently stuck on a subpar internet connection, so I don't know what the errors exactly are... https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/j6ACfIAtNXDfP4BZpe3T0voD7zQG1xe4bWANbYWQJJIXBXpmr4bswGF6yvb2uSf-Ozq7D7-ynrAeAnwtCAZ5xF8bQLXI4BM3j1_V=s0

    ReplyDelete
  92. While a few weeks ago I was able to export my data successfully without errors, the past 2 attempts unfortunately haven't been without errors again...
    I'm wondering what is causing these errors again now... Haven't been able yet to download my archives yet though, as I'm currently stuck on a subpar internet connection, so I don't know what the errors exactly are... https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/_jqV8AX6ldUpAAFw4UR_ppYxRj2P4VC5Z_nbJsttzeq0m5JUzdAQsahAXvdziMomCAOzQGgy99MpQ_la5IJIkMhCs5Og0VqZFg4A=s0

    ReplyDelete
  93. While a few weeks ago I was able to export my data successfully without errors, the past 2 attempts unfortunately haven't been without errors again...
    I'm wondering what is causing these errors again now... Haven't been able yet to download my archives yet though, as I'm currently stuck on a subpar internet connection, so I don't know what the errors exactly are... https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/pPbUhI5DkUdE-uzo3qoz7oXHxTgAP0rUKz4eezEpCAm3b2iINN-FYqYD3ZFG5HMEMgHHL1vKXyrr4S9Ihqxr56OJMC_78mM0c26M=s0

    ReplyDelete
  94. While a few weeks ago I was able to export my data successfully without errors, the past 2 attempts unfortunately haven't been without errors again...
    I'm wondering what is causing these errors again now... Haven't been able yet to download my archives yet though, as I'm currently stuck on a subpar internet connection, so I don't know what the errors exactly are... https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/XM9517nGfb3PvMAGuEfjVJeV5A0AjC9uOaH913-9SRWJIXtAiROB0jZFmErkno68S6eSdZfrvPxAyF9_GeXc0E87nwmIEq0UFywU=s0

    ReplyDelete
  95. While a few weeks ago I was able to export my data successfully without errors, the past 2 attempts unfortunately haven't been without errors again...
    I'm wondering what is causing these errors again now... Haven't been able yet to download my archives yet though, as I'm currently stuck on a subpar internet connection, so I don't know what the errors exactly are... https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/sy5uFOVkayBr7vU0ICAijK5No4pAkyF_SPsPjwEsbyveBi5R8Bi0gTqhPIJpvAzpKK7of6p55CO7kL5aBSLufCp7IlJ8vQZ8B4nr=s0

    ReplyDelete
  96. While a few weeks ago I was able to export my data successfully without errors, the past 2 attempts unfortunately haven't been without errors again...
    I'm wondering what is causing these errors again now... Haven't been able yet to download my archives yet though, as I'm currently stuck on a subpar internet connection, so I don't know what the errors exactly are... https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/_sEz-z3MsTaTDfM1Ej2C2vIsCGteVcA3CpCUh9EAazGq2s0AOXZ2ifoyJ6AjjFo3u_kI2joGRxj6CcE3rVM80nJ5L1mc8ElIjM2X=s0

    ReplyDelete
  97. While a few weeks ago I was able to export my data successfully without errors, the past 2 attempts unfortunately haven't been without errors again...
    I'm wondering what is causing these errors again now... Haven't been able yet to download my archives yet though, as I'm currently stuck on a subpar internet connection, so I don't know what the errors exactly are... https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/MzIG3Cxd7RIMWWMdM0gHv_YEyvdj307OAmH4VARTp3q1dtWdei6yqEEzy02uZbESaXukRVtqrJuhNZrHfROVtmZ63KB_xc6kYWu_=s0

    ReplyDelete
  98. While a few weeks ago I was able to export my data successfully without errors, the past 2 attempts unfortunately haven't been without errors again...
    I'm wondering what is causing these errors again now... Haven't been able yet to download my archives yet though, as I'm currently stuck on a subpar internet connection, so I don't know what the errors exactly are... https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-gtBLkT9dvDiE4IuV8Gh9AFxDxvf2jkUwzng4XCOMyXuRTYawkzPZzZ-raZeUAwYRWm1M8MegB0yOxYwuUXygOEAtjGZU9_TZVx_=s0

    ReplyDelete
  99. While a few weeks ago I was able to export my data successfully without errors, the past 2 attempts unfortunately haven't been without errors again...
    I'm wondering what is causing these errors again now... Haven't been able yet to download my archives yet though, as I'm currently stuck on a subpar internet connection, so I don't know what the errors exactly are... https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/YolRmFjvRS2qmEi8D5KVu7Jnw7zvT3jJT_oCyfWrmh2fg-QOw52n8vSF6bJk-77RH8GVPxyH7VsxfXMVj2bjH9Z3jvVuPuV3DAE8=s0

    ReplyDelete

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