On the Analytics page, one "Unknown user" row holds most of the sessions, messages, PRs, and cost. Only people who log into the dashboard end up as named rows.
Only tested with Slack, but I think this happens with Linear and Github too, the bot integrations don't attach an SCM login when they create a session, so there's nothing to group on.
Net effect: you can't tell who is actually using the tool from this page
Potential Solution have the bots pass something, the Slack user's email, the Linear actor, the GitHub sender when they create a session, and let analytics include non-web sources tagged by where they came from.
On the Analytics page, one "Unknown user" row holds most of the sessions, messages, PRs, and cost. Only people who log into the dashboard end up as named rows.
Only tested with Slack, but I think this happens with Linear and Github too, the bot integrations don't attach an SCM login when they create a session, so there's nothing to group on.
Net effect: you can't tell who is actually using the tool from this page
Potential Solution have the bots pass something, the Slack user's email, the Linear actor, the GitHub sender when they create a session, and let analytics include non-web sources tagged by where they came from.