A MoUD official told International Business Times that they're relying on people to let other users know of a particular location's condition. "The system being put in place relies heavily on crowdsourcing, with people's feedback helping fuel it," he said. If a toilet isn't clean or if it's already closed, "he or she can give it a bad review or rating." The tool will be available in Delhi before November ends and will show not just public toilets, but also those in malls, gas stations, hospitals and other places anyone can go to. MoUD wants to expand the program to cover other urban areas, but that could take a while: the ministry doesn't have a concrete plan or timeline yet.