Hi Alexander,

If you have relevant skills with developing software, and the interest and
time to help out, then WMF Project Grants might be able to provide you with
some financial support for work in this area. Have a look at
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:Project



Pine


On Wed, Nov 16, 2016 at 7:24 AM, Dan Andreescu <dandree...@wikimedia.org>
wrote:

> Alexander, thanks for writing.  It's possible to get data by category and
> country, though it is quite hard and limited to internal use at the
> moment.  We are working to both make it easier and available for publishing
> to the world, but there is a lot of work to be done.  We're an open source
> project, so of course you can contribute to that work, I can link you and
> others interested.  You can also apply for a research project here:
>
> https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Research:New_project
>
> If you apply for a research project, you'll have to sign an NDA to get
> access to this data, and meet all the requirements of the research team.
>
> Either way, I hope that within a year or so, the kind of question you're
> asking will be possible to answer with public data.
>
> On Wed, Nov 2, 2016 at 3:22 PM, Alexander Ugarov <auga...@walton.uark.edu>
> wrote:
>
>> Hi!
>>
>> I'm a Ph.D. student in economics, using some of the Wikimedia data in my
>> research. My question is whether it's possible to get the data on Wikipedia
>> pageviews by country and article category? Currently the Wikimedia
>> Foundation provides the aggregate data on pageviews by country and the less
>> aggregate data on pageviews by article, but it looks that there is no way
>> to find out, for example, the pageviews of math articles in India.
>>
>> More specifically, my questions are:
>> 1) If is it possible in some way to extract the information on pageviews
>> by country and subject area from your publicly available data? The amount
>> of data currently available is already vast, and I could miss it.
>> 2) If it is not possible, then how can I persuade you into making this
>> data available? I'm going to argue that the data can be made available
>> without losing confidentiality by using either first IP numbers or by
>> publishing only the country of the user, as well as aggregating by the
>> category.
>>
>> I'm looking forward to hear from you. I'm sure that many social
>> scientists will be also glad to use the opportunity to produce more
>> interesting and policy-relevant research.
>>
>> Best regards,
>> Alexander Ugarov,
>> Ph.D. Candidate
>> Sam M. Walton College of Business
>> Department of Economics
>> University of Arkansas
>>
>>
>>
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>
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