Sorry, forwarding to Analytics...
Hi Angelina,
I don't think there's any (legal) way of tracking Wikipedia traffic.
All Wikipedia traffic data is protected by WMF's privacy policy[1]
and handled accordingly.
We do, however, provide public sanitized high-level statistics on page
views for
On Wed, Feb 28, 2018 at 3:17 AM, Georg Sorst wrote:
> Hi list,
>
> as part of a lecture on Information Retrieval I am giving we work a lot
> with Simple Wikipedia articles. It's a great data set because it's
> comprehensive and not domain specific so when building search
>Or is there another method you also count that is gathered for other
companies that collect views?
Companies that do this such us comScore do it by getting their participants
install (normally desktop software) in their machines and tracking page
views that these participants do. It was the case
>Did I miss something? Is this data available somewhere?
You can find more information about click streams datasets here:
https://blog.wikimedia.org/2018/01/16/wikipedia-rabbit-hole-clickstream/
Datasets do not include simple wiki, there are calculated for a few wikis
some or which are not very
On Wed, Feb 28, 2018 at 3:17 AM, Georg Sorst wrote:
> Hi list,
>
> as part of a lecture on Information Retrieval I am giving we work a lot
> with Simple Wikipedia articles. It's a great data set because it's
> comprehensive and not domain specific so when building search
Hi list,
as part of a lecture on Information Retrieval I am giving we work a lot
with Simple Wikipedia articles. It's a great data set because it's
comprehensive and not domain specific so when building search on top of it
humans can easily judge result quality, and it's still small enough to be
Hello,
I recently spoke with "Next Big Sound" which is a company that tracks
Wikipedia page views on certain artists. They informed me that they got
details of the views directly from Wikipedia (because I had emailed them
that the View counts mentioned on Wikipedia and Next Big Sound show a major