Real-time traffic graphs for the Transparency Report
Tuesday, April 5, 2011
(Cross-posted from the Official Google Blog.)
When we introduced the Transparency Report last year, we promised to keep looking for new and useful ways to display data about traffic to our services. In response to your requests, today we’re adding graphs for each region that show traffic patterns for all products in aggregate. These graphs will show data with a five-minute delay.
In this graph, for example, you’ll see that all of our services in Egypt were down from January 27 to February 1:
Starting today, you won’t have to sift through every single product graph to figure out if one or more services are inaccessible. You’ll get a snapshot up front. We’ve also added annotations for historical anomalies that we’ve seen in the traffic to our services. To see the graph for each cited incident, just click on the corresponding link.
As the Transparency Engineering team lead, part of my job is to ensure that we find, uncover and visualize datasets within Google that can help inform research and analysis on important topics. We believe that providing the facts can spark useful debate about the scope and authority of policy decisions around the globe.
We’ll continue to iterate, and we hope that the Report will help shed light on the accessibility and patterns of traffic to our services around the world.
Is there any way to save/export the data in a graph so we can create our own graphs?
ReplyDeleteI am a PhD student and I want to use one of the graphs in a paper, but I don't want to use a print screen, first because it doesn't look professional, but also because I know I could make a much better job using the source data. I will of course give Google the proper credit for the data, but I still want to do my own graph.
If this isn't possible yet, will the data ever going to be made available? Is there any other way to get the data now?