We need to be really careful with this. Although Microsoft does this you
also agree to their license and its usage. To remain open and free when
you start collecting data you breach that same trust and open source.
When you link something to collect data you must also inform the
customer that you are doing so, this may have some negative effects on
distribution and usage. I have in the past and still do have a written
survey on how they heard of us, do they use the product, what release,
etc. The same survey does not require contact information unless they
wish to be involved. What I am trying to say is since there is no user
license agreement or user statement that informs the customer that you
are doing so, it will breach privacy of the user, and possibly loose the
customer from using the product. Just be careful with this, you may want
to check with the legal folks prior to attempting to collect information.
On 7/18/2016 11:56 AM, Justin W. Flory wrote:
On 07/11/2016 07:17 AM, Mohd Izhar Firdaus Ismail wrote:
> Hi guys,
>
> I'm wondering if there is a way for me to get raw anonymized (hashed IPs
> or something) logs of people using Fedora around the world?. Eg:
> download logs with origin country or something.
>
> Is this data opened up? .. Having this as open data I think can help in
> determining impact of activities.
>
> Thanks.
>
Hello! I think this is a good question to ask, and you're also
definitely not the first.
There are certain things Fedora is able to discern and some things
that are not available to us, in order to preserve user's privacy. At
the end of the day, preserving the privacy of the user is the number
one priority and comes before all else. For this reason, we don't
collect information such as hashed IP addresses from systems actively
running Fedora, or even counters of how many active installations
there are.
However, there are some things that we are able to discern. I know one
example of this is the number of yum/dnf connections made to Fedora
repositories. While not the best or even the most consistent way of
measuring growth or popularity, it can serve as a good indicator, and
doesn't violate the privacy of users.
Fedora Project Leader Matthew Miller presented with some of this data
in his "State of Fedora" talk at Flock 2015 (and also some other
conferences after). You can see more information about his talk and
this information at the following pages.
https://fedoramagazine.org/state-fedora-2015-edition/
https://mattdm.org/fedora/2016devconf/
As for where to find or access this specific information, I wouldn't
be able to advise. You could try asking on the Fedora Infrastructure
mailing list or asking in #fedora-admin on freenode IRC.
Hope this helps answer some of your questions. :)
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Cheers,
Justin W. Flory
jflory7(a)gmail.com
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