On Fri, Apr 29, 2016, at 01:14 PM, isabela wrote:
So I thought of the following question: 'What happens to the tor network when there is an event happening in the world?'
This is really great, important work.
Then I thought of what world events are predicable that we could check for Tor's impact? elections...
...
Of course we should also take a look for the same thing when unpredictable events happens.. like the Egyptian revolution or a shutdown of services for whatever reason (whatsapp in Brazil).
I think that shutdowns of service of blocking of specific apps are another important metric. This is often when we have seen growth in Orbot downloads in a specific region.
On that note, I am happy to share more detailed Orbot download information with you as part of this effort, to see how that correlate's with general Tor usage in a specific region.
Why I am sharing this? Because there are tons of smart people in this list and maybe someone has a different way to measure tor's impact in the world.
I think beyond a list, there a great deal of researches at places like the Citizen Lab and the Berkman Center that would be eager and very capable to help with such things, as well as separate noise from actual events.
Or maybe someone knows how I could automate such a thing :) (api somewhere?)
Unfortunately, I don't think this can be automated, but at the same time, I think just showing a few important, meaningful correlations per year would have a big impact.
Or maybe ideas of other points of data for reference. For instance, I am now thinking if x users connected on Tor means a lot or a little in a country.. that will depend on how many people are online, the number of internet penetration for that country.
That was definitely running through my mind as I was looking at the graphics. 200 users may seem small, but depending upon Internet usage, desktop vs mobile, and whether you have the right 200 people are all important context to have.
Yes, I know this is very simplistic way of talking about something as big as 'impact in the world'. But I have seem this information being useful in other scenario, and it did helped a lot to pass the message of what value people should think of when thinking of the product.
This is exactly the way my wife who works on multi-million dollar public health projects measures their impact of programs to get people to quit smoking or to reduce infection of certain disease. At some point, it all comes down to "did less people die in X region from this terrible thing?", or "how much money did we spend per person who did not die?". If that metric is inline with what the funder expected, then you get more money, and less people will die.
talk about it. And for a while the data science team did only this, publish correlation data of what happened at twitter during global events. I believe it did worked because that information was what people (media, mouth to mouth etc) start to pick up when anyone would talk about twitter.
I completely agree, and am happy to support the effort to have the same kind of impact with Tor, Orbot and all related onion efforts.
+n
:) first, thanks for all excitement that was a lot of cool stuff in your email and I do want mobile data and getting people who are tracking events involved would be super uper! there will be a follow up from this discussion so we can actually execute this idea. now i am mostly collecting data from y'all ;)
On 04/29/2016 11:02 AM, Nathan Freitas wrote:
Or maybe someone knows how I could automate such a thing :) (api somewhere?)
Unfortunately, I don't think this can be automated, but at the same time, I think just showing a few important, meaningful correlations per year would have a big impact.
here is an idea of automation:
I have a dashboard where i can tune the different graphs of data points that will help me tell the story.
Instead of going to the web page for metrics of direct connected users, then the one for bridges.. like I did, if i had the two in the same window would already automate the monkey job behind that google doc :)
imagine more data points in this dashboard. maybe i can see a rss feed of reports from citizen lab on global events ? so I know where and when to look at if I want to check if there is a story on tor network related to this event.
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