Categories: Social Media

What data is Google+ storing in your browser (& how can you access it)

It’s no secrets that the social networks such as Facebook, Twitter, and Google+ collect vast amounts of data on us. What we don’t get to see very often is how this data is used and combined with other data to provide these sites with even more detailed information about us.

One way to see this data is to access the HTML5 database these social networks, and other sites, store on our computers.

With the latest release of HTML web developers have the option of creating a number of databases which are stored on our computers. These databases store information about our site preferences and customizations which can be quickly accessed by the site.

What Google+'s HTML5 database looks like

Exploring the Google+ local database
For example, the Google+ local database stores data about you and your contacts across 22 individual data-points. These databases contain information about who you email, what their various email addresses are (if they have more than one), their phone numbers, their Google+ IDs, as well as other pieces of data.

Some of this information is in this public domain but other pieces of data are not.

For example, one piece of data that we don’t usually have access to is how Google sees our relationships to other users. Looking at the database, it appears that Google ranks how close we are (our affinity) to other Google Account users and provides Google+ with access to this data.

Your affinity to other users seems to be measured on a scale of 0 to 38, where 38 signifies a very strong degree of connection (probably based on the number of emails sent and received between yourself and the other user).

There also appears to be some unused columns in the database (at least for us, anyway), four of these are labelled “isFollowingMe”,” iAmFollowing”, “isMyContact”, “isFavorite.” For us, these are currently given a value of 0.

The sheer amount of data is also surprising – our local Google+ database contained information on 933 people, most of whom are not on Google+. Interestingly, what Google appears to do is to assign a specific Google ID for every email address sent to a Gmail account – this ID then forms the URL of the user’s Google+ account if they sign up for the service.

Accessing Google’s local database on your computer.
If you want to have a look at this data yourself you’ll need Google Chrome. Using Chrome, log into your Google+ account as normal. Once the page has loaded press F12 on your keyboard.

This will open Chrome’s Developer Toolbar at the bottom of the screen, which is typically used by web developers when building websites. On the bottom right-hand side of the screen click on the cog icon.

Next, under the section marked “User Agent”, select Override User Agent and in the dropdown menu select “iPad – iOS5”. This will fool the website to load the iPad version of the page. Just below this section select “Emulate touch events.”

Google+ local database

Once you’ve done this reload the page and select “Resources” (on the top left of the panel) then select “Databases” > People.DB.your.gmail.address@gmail.com – where “your.gmail.address” is your own Gmail email address.

Finally click on the item listed as “Contacts18,” this is your Google+ contacts database. This might take a long time to load but once it does you should have access to your local Google+ database.

Ajit Jain

Ajit Jain is marketing and sales head at Octal Info Solution, a leading iPhone app development company and offering platform to hire Android app developers for your own app development project. He is available to connect on Google Plus, Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

Recent Posts

Not Your Typical CPA Firm: A CEO on Mission to Guide Companies Through the Ever-Changing World of Tech Compliance (Brains Byte Back Podcast)

In today’s episode of the Brains Byte Back podcast, we speak with Mike DeKock, the founder…

1 day ago

‘Social problems in substituting humans for machines will be easier in developed countries with declining populations’: Larry Fink to WEF

Blackrock CEO Larry Fink tells the World Economic Forum (WEF) that developed countries with shrinking…

2 days ago

Meet Nobody Studios, the enterprise creating 100 companies amidst global funding winter 

Founders and investors alike were hopeful the funding winter would start to thaw in 2024.…

2 days ago

As fintech innovation picks up pace, software experts like 10Pearls help lead the way

Neobanks and fintech solutions hit the US market more than a decade ago, acting as…

3 days ago

CBDC will hopefully replace cash, ‘be one hundred percent digital’: WEF panel

Central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) will hopefully replace physical cash and become fully digital, a…

4 days ago

Ethical Imperatives: Should We Embrace AI?

Five years ago, Frank Chen posed a question that has stuck with me every day…

1 week ago