Friend of a friend
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(Redirected from FOAF)
- For the Foo Fighters song, see Friend of a Friend (song). For the social networking software, see FOAF (software).
Friend of a friend (FOAF) is a phrase used to refer to someone that one does not know well — literally, a friend of a friend.
In some social sciences, the phrase is used as a half-joking shorthand for the fact that much of the information on which people act comes from distant sources (as in "It happened to a friend of a friend of mine") and cannot be confirmed. It is probably best known from urban legend studies. The term was popularized by Jan Harold Brunvand, the best-known writer of that field. It was apparently first published by Rodney Dale in his 1978 book The Tumour in the Whale - WH Allen ISBN 0426187105 - in which he discussed the "FOAFtale".
The rise of social networking services has led to increased use of this term.
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See also
- Dhúirt bean liom gur dhúirt bean leí — a woman told me that a woman told her that…de:FOAF