Good looking "non scientific" study.
I remember seeing a similar study done on another forum. Its purpose was to test which oils work best. I don't know if anyone has a link to it, but it showed how long it took for a carbon steel ingot to rust when coated with various substances.
I find that after a carbon steel knife builds up a good patina, it resists rusting more than a virgin steel blade. It still isn't rust proof though, if it sits in water it will start to rust. Really though, the best way to keep rust as bay on a carbon steel knives has always been keeping it dry with a light coating of oil or grease. Even a light coating of melted animal fat works.
In modern times more expensive carbon steel knives are often sold with some kind of Teflon based coating. This coating has basically the same purpose as the oil, coating the blade and resisting rust. Then all you have to worry about is the edge rusting until the coating fully wears off (which in my experience takes a long time if the coating is good).
Another modern option I've seen is a blade with stainless on the outside and a carbon steel core. They're probably the most expensive of the three, but are very rust resistant (except on the edge) and you don't have to worry about a coating wearing off.
With all that in mind, if you spend a lot a time around water it's tough to beat a blade made of a good stainless steel. It may not be able to do that cool sparker thing with a rock and it may not be as easy to sharpen as a carbon steel blade, but it can do everything else as good, or better, and it's low maintenance. Most of the blades I use now are made of stainless or a semi-stainless steel and I don't feel I'm really at much of a loss versus a carbon steel blade.