> You can edit the wikipedia page and add your research yourself. This is a > pragmatic solution, so we don't have to run a full fledged system like some > other large data collection platforms do [1], to capture scientific output. True, but then the list might get pretty cluttered.
> If there is enough support for us running such things, this could be put on > our road map of course. At first, I was in favour of such a site. But I guess the problem is that students, not familiar with RIPE Atlas, might also not find such a website either. It would be interesting if [1] is often visited. >> Maybe this page could also provide links to the measurements themselves for >> transparency. > There are multiple ways to do this. For instance: One could also add a > specific tag to measurements used in a particular study and then refer to > that in the publication. In the past, we’ve usually used the measurement IDs as a reference, but a tag might be the more elegant solution. > How to capture scientific output from our data collection platforms (both > Atlas and RIS) and specifically their relevance to network operations has my > specific attention, if people have good ideas around this let me know [2] Unfortunately I didn’t make it to the deployathon. Was there any discussion regarding this topic. > > [1] https://www.caida.org/data/publications/ > [2] We are doing a deployathon today, you can still register ( > https://labs.ripe.net/Members/becha/lets-deploy-together-ripe-atlas-software-probes-deployathon > ), and I'd love to have a chat around this and other topics in the > spatial.chat that we'll be using :)
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