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Basic analytics #62

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pcuci opened this issue Aug 8, 2015 · 1 comment
Open

Basic analytics #62

pcuci opened this issue Aug 8, 2015 · 1 comment
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@pcuci
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pcuci commented Aug 8, 2015

Track basic usage behaviours

@David-Ro what's most important we track from the get-go?

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David-Ro commented Aug 9, 2015

Attendance time arrived. Must have someone (other than oneself) and ideally more than one source, track that the person is there. I.e. has arrived, is now in the room, is still in the room, is in attendance, is an attendee, is participating, is here on site, is talking, is querying, is interacting, isn't just observing. THIS for each person, at least once in their lifetime, at a public meeting or meetup, and having arrived while fully expecting to be in such a setting. This at every time when Ntrain is involved.  Why. Only after someone has arrived at a public event can concepts begin to be discussed in public with them, or recorded from them. We need a publicly held discussion with them participating publicly, in order to begin owning rights to information, data, concepts, etc.Otherwise, it could be claimed later that nothing has been said in public yet and that Ntrain /Speedteam must cut out any and all information derived from any interaction with PersonX, and we have no standing legally as everything is still possibly in the private domain. (E.g. talks about possible team, project, ideas, themes, concerns = all are private). Knowing who is in the room is useful for a future legal basis to begin owning something of value not co-owned or shared. The legal system is slow to change: (and as far as I know) it requires that people make statements in a public setting knowing that their words can be heard by "more than one" i.e. by several, and that their words can reasonably be remembered as having been declared in a public setting. Then, they no longer own the words nor the information contained therein. Everyone can own it all. It's now public. So, we need to enable for some users to declare that some other people are in the room, so as to have eyewitnesses who just like to gain pixels not for any big reason. We do not want to rely on self-declarations. So, it's "who's in the room" and it's derived from observations that are made about other people not observations about oneself. To initialize the first-person-to-arrive who is the one who must self-declare, we can have a process that holds their self-declaration until some other person sends in a confirmation.‎To incent users, best might be to give a pixel reward for being the first to spot a newcomer entering the room, and a nicer pixel for being a generally reliable spotter tracker declarer. Must know time, date, place, and what the reason was for that specific event to have been called. Best is to accumulate several users' declarations that PersonX is in the room. Know who is in the room.Know this based on getting it from one or more sources. Time of arrival is more serious than a vague statement. ‎

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