--- El mar, 13/4/10, Martin Hellberg Olsson Martin.HellbergOlsson@UGent.be escribió:
De: Martin Hellberg Olsson Martin.HellbergOlsson@UGent.be Asunto: Re: [Wiki-research-l] Access to HTTP access logs for Wikipedia articles? Para: "Research into Wikimedia content and communities" wiki-research-l@lists.wikimedia.org Fecha: martes, 13 de abril, 2010 19:14
A reply to the whole discussion, and at least one other recent one, rather than this last question.
This probably doesn't do everything that any of the people asking need, but should be relevant. I'm a bit surprised it hasn't been mentioned - at least the people involved in these should be able to advise, even if the online data isn't usable.
Sorry, correct me if I'm wrong, but I think that Domas' dumps only contain info about articles (that is, pages in main namespace) and a summary count of hits for each page visited (so you can say which article is the most visited).
We receive raw data for all namespaces of all Wikimedia projects, so you can get more info parsing the URLs (like different actions requested: view, preview, save...).
Best, Felipe.
Wikipedia article traffic statistics: http://stats.grok.se/
is a "mere visualizer" for the raw data available here: http://dammit.lt/wikistats/
as stated in the visualizer's FAQ: http://stats.grok.se/about
" Domas Mituzas put together a system to gather access statistics from wikipedia's squid cluster and publishes it here. This site is a mere visualizer of that data."
Very happy if this can be of any help!
Martin
S. Nunes wrote:
Thanks for the quick feedback.
Can you tell me to whom should this 'direct request' be addressed? A 1/100 sample or similar would be great. Is referral data included in this sample?
Regards, -- Sérgio Nunes
On 13 April 2010 16:09, Felipe Ortega glimmer_phoenix@yahoo.es wrote:
Hi Sérgio,
Some universities (like ours) receive a 1/100 sample of the whole set of petitions processed by Wikimedia Squid servers.
It is provided on direct request, however. As far as I know the data is not consistently archived in a public repository anywhere (but I maybe unaware of some system storing that info).
Some work has already been published on this topic:
* A. J. Reinoso, J. M. Gonzalez-Barahona, G. Robles, and F. Ortega, "A quantitative approach to the use of the wikipedia," in 2009 IEEE Symposium on Computers and Communications. IEEE, July 2009, pp. 56-61. [Online]. Available: http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ISCC.2009.5202401
Regards, Felipe.
--- El mar, 13/4/10, S. Nunes snunes@gmail.com escribió:
De: S. Nunes snunes@gmail.com Asunto: [Wiki-research-l] Access to HTTP access logs for Wikipedia articles? Para: "Wikipedia Research List" wiki-research-l@lists.wikimedia.org Fecha: martes, 13 de abril, 2010 13:23 Hi all,
I presume that Wikipedia keeps data about HTTP accesses to all articles. Can anybody inform me if this data is available for research purposes?
I am particularly interested in HTTP referral information for each article. I suspect that this information could be used to estimate topical relevance for each document. Access to this information poses no risk to users' privacy since no user information is made available - sessions' id, hour/minute timestamp data and IPs could be easily discarded.
I am new to this list, so I really don't know if this has been previously discussed. I searched the archives and found no relevant results on this issue.
Thanks in advance for your feedback, -- Sérgio Nunes
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