![facebook download all photos facebook download all photos](https://allindiaroundup.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/happy-mothers-day-images-hd-wallpapers-3d-pics-mothers-day-2017-pictures-photos-free-download-15.jpg)
getElementsByTagName ( ' img ' )) Ĭopy and paste the output and stick it into a text file. Next, pick out all the images on the page with this javascript snippet: for ( img of document. To get the page to fully load I had to scroll down a bunch until new things stopped turning up. Next you need to go to a special search results page which contains all the photos you’re tagged in. I used this tool which didn’t ask for any permissions so is probably fine? HOWTO: Download all photos you’re tagged in, you rebel youįirst off you need your facebook id.
![facebook download all photos facebook download all photos](https://i2.wp.com/www.alphr.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/5.jpg)
Yay privacy! If this had been the case years ago (or always) then Cambridge Analytica couldn’t have gotten 50 million profiles from 270k users. It turns out that it’s impossible to fetch this list of photos via the Graph API (and consequently, from any third party app), since the access token you can create as an individual user is not authorized to view your friend’s data (including their photos, which they’ve tagged you in). I assumed that these would come along for the ride by default, but apparently not. The first thing I noticed was missing was any photo I was tagged in but that I didn’t upload myself.
#Facebook download all photos archive
I noticed that my data archive was only 60 megs - seemed a little bit light for 12 years of usage data. This gives you an archive full of HTML files, images and video clips with an index.html you can open in a browser. Part of that is making sure that all the data I want to keep from my Facebook days is safely stored somewhere locally.įirst task up was to use Facebook’s tool (“Download a copy” link at the bottom of the settings page) to download an archive of “all my data”. Over the next couple weeks I’m going to work on tools to help transition all my data from Facebook to Diaspora*.