The tool, dubbed Encore, developed by Georgia Tech researchers can be installed by adding a single line of code to a Web page.
The tool runs when a user visits a website where the code is installed and then discreetly collects data from potentially censored sites.
The researchers hope the data they collect will allow them to determine the wheres, whens and hows of what's blocked, as well as identify ways to get around restricted access.
"Web censorship is a growing problem affecting users in an increasing number of countries," said Sam Burnett, the Georgia Tech PhD candidate who leads the project.
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The measurement tool developed by Burnett and his adviser Nick Feamster, professor at the Georgia Tech School of Computer Science, works by collecting information about a user's Web access and censorship of various sites across other countries.
These measurements happen automatically in the background after a page has loaded and do not affect a site's performance or a user's experience.
Most users won't ever notice them or realise they are helping to measure Web accessibility, although the tool provides ways to inform users that their browsers are conducting the measurements.
Currently, Encore gathers data from a list of sites compiled by Herdict, a user-driven platform designed to identify Web blockages such as denials of service, censorship and other filtering. But where Herdict relies on anecdotal evidence, Encore automates the measurements.
Burnett and Feamster hope to provide a global database of information generated through the study that will be available to help paint a clearer picture related to the health of the Internet.
"People who work on Internet freedom - ranging from policymakers to the developers of tools for improving access to information - need accurate information about what information is inaccessible and when it becomes blocked," Feamster said.