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24 December 2025 to 1 January 2026

24 December 2025 to 1 January 2026: The German National Library will be closed at both locations. The exhibitions of the German Exile Archive 1933–1945 will also be closed. The exhibitions of the German Museum of Books and Writing will open from 10:00 to 18:00 on 27, 28 and 30 December.

Programme Social Media Access Days

Tuesday, 17.03.2026

9:00 – 13:00

Pre-Conference Workshop: The GESIS Methods Hub Social Media Datasprint (Johannes Kiesel, Christina Viehmann, Felix Münch, Arnim Bleier, GESIS – Leibniz-Institut für Sozialwissenschaften)
limited number of participants: max. 20 persons
Call for Participation

13:30 – 13:45 Opening Notes

13:45 – 15:15

Session 1: Nachnutzung vorhandener Daten und Korpora

  • AVERA. Eine „Community-Datentreuhand“ zur Unterstützung der kollaborativen Nutzung von Accountverzeichnissen in der politischen Online-Kommunikationsforschung
    • Jan Rau, Moritz Fürneisen, Gregor Wiedemann (Social-Media Observatory am Leibniz-Institut für Medienforschung Hans-Bredow-Institut)
    • Nils Jungmann, Pascal Siegers (GESIS Leibniz-Institut für Sozialwissenschaften)
  • Nachnutzbarkeit eines Wikipedia-Datenkorpus im Zusammenhang zur vorgezogenen Bundestagswahl 2025
    • Marco Wähner, Ahrabhi Kathirgamalingam (Center for Advanced Internet Studies (CAIS))
    • Lucas Enzmann, Jan Dennis Gumz (Fraunhofer-Institut für Offene Kommunikationssysteme FOKUS)
  • Schichten der Sichtbarkeit: Datenformate zur Archivierung von Social-Media-Daten
    • Jakob Jünger, Katharina Maubach (Universität Münster, Digital Media & Computational Methods)

15:15 – 15:45 Coffee Break

15:45 – 17:45

Session 2: Neue Archivierungsansätze

  • The Life of a Scraper – Best Practices aus der Forschung mit und ohne Social-Media-APIs
    • Mia Berg (Universität Hamburg)
    • Oliver Vettermann (FIZ Karlsruhe)
  • Langzeitverfügbarkeit und Nachnutzung von Wissenschaftsblogs: Ergebnisse aus dem Projekt Infra Wiss Blogs
    • Catharina Ochsner, Heinz Pampel (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin)
  • Social-Media-Literatur an der Schnittstelle zwischen Archiv und Literaturwissenschaft. Perspektiven einer graphdatenbasierten und akteurszentrierten Modellierung
    • Gabriel Viehhauser, Carl Friedrich Haak, Thomas Jäger, Beatrice Nava (Universität Wien)
  • Post, Preserve, Pass On. Das Projekt „DiCHOT“ als Handlungssystem für musikbezogenen User Generated Content
    • Kristina Petzold (Deutsche Nationalbibliothek)

Wednesday, 18.03.2026

9:30 – 9:45: Welcome to Day 2

9:45 – 10:45

Session 3: Keynote

Prof. Axel Bruns (Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane).
https://www.qut.edu.au/about/our-people/academic-profiles/a.bruns

Nearly a Decade after the APIcalypse: Where Are We Now on Social Media Data Access?

2018’s Cambridge Analytica scandal served as a convenient excuse for many social media platforms to severely curtail access to their Application Programming Interfaces (APIs), restricting the critical, independent, public-interest scrutiny of public communication on social media, and of the platforms’ management and moderation of such communication, at a time of increasing polarisation, disinformation, toxicity, and general dysfunction in public debate. At the time, four broad pathways appeared available to researchers seeking to address this ‘APIcalypse’: to walk away, to lobby for change, to accommodate and acquiesce, and to break the rules; all four paths have been explored in the contexts of different platforms, but the severe disruption to established research approaches has also led many of us to critically evaluate how and why we have used the social media activity data that APIs (used to) provide. Reviewing developments across a range of leading and emerging platforms, this keynote explores the current situation in our field, and discusses possible future developments.

10:45 – 11:15 Coffee Break

11:15 – 12:15

Session 4: Cross-Platform Comparison

  • Challenges of Cross-Platform Analysis of Far-Right Mobilization
    • Ofra Klein (Erasmus University Rotterdam)
  • From Wikipedia to Grokipedia: Reconstructing Open Knowledge Through LLM-Augmented Pipelines
    • Veronika Batzdorfer (Karlsruher Institut für Technologie)

12:15 – 13:30 Lunch Break

13:30 – 15:00

Session 5: Policies and Legal Contexts

  • Scrutinising Social Media Platforms’ Initial Boundary-Setting Practices for Research Data Access to Publicly Accessible Data Under Art. 40(12) DSA
    • LK Seiling, Sophia Graf, Jakob Ohme, Ulrike Klinger
  • You Shall Not … Archive: Exploring Social Media Platform Policies and Their Impact on Social Media Archiving Initiatives
    • Beatrice Cannelli (University of London)
  • Legal Conditions for Sharing Platform Data – the Use Case of Twitter/X Developer Policies
    • Luisa Golland, Jonas Recker, Jan Schwalbach, Oliver Watteler (GESIS – Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences)

15:00 – 15:30 Coffee Break

15:30 – 17:30

  • Workshop: How to Prepare a DSC Reasoned Request Under the Digital Services Act (DSA) to Access Non-Public Data from Very Large Online Platforms (VLOPs).
    • Olivier Y. Rouquette, Yannik Peters (GESIS – Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences)
    • Paulo Almeida, Joana Gonçalves de Sá (Laboratory of Instrumentation and Experimental Particle Physics, Portugal)

To the workshop

Limited number of participants: max. 25 persons, registration is required (via the conference registration form)

Thursday, 19.03.2026

9:30 – 11:30

Session 6: Data Collection and Corpus Generation from Social Media

  • Towards FAIR Metadata for Social Media Corpora
    • Alexander König (CLARIN ERIC)
    • Egon W. Stemle, Lionel Nicholas (Eurac Research)
  • A CorBus of Monthly n-Grams Generated from More Than Two Billion English Tweets
    • Elso Dittfeld, Robert Jäschke (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin)
    • Dimitar Dimitrov (GESIS – Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences)
  • Large-Scale Temporal Stratified Sampling for the VLOPs. Data Access and Sampling Strategies for the BIG 5
    • Ramin Soleymani (Barcelone Supercomputing Center)
  • Gaining Access: A Continuous Crawl of Telegram’s Public Channels Landscape
    • Susmita Gangopadhyay, Danilo Dessi, Dimitar Dimitrov, Stefan Dietze (GESIS – Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences)

11:30 – 12:00 Coffee Break

12:00 – 13:00

Session 7: Systemic Risks

  • Archiving Hacktivism: Derivative Collections for High-Risk Publics (Images, manifests, Memes)
    • Hanna Gaweł, Jagiellonian (University Krakau)
  • Systemic Risks and Data Access in Online Marketplace Under the Digital Services Act
    • Giada Marino, Nicola Righetti (Università di Urbino Carlo Bo)

13:00 – 13:15 Conference Closing Notes

Last changes: 17.12.2025

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