Let $(X, \mathcal{A}, \mu)$ be a measure space such that $\mu(X) < \infty$. We say that two measurable sets $A$ and $B$ are equivalent if $\mu (A \Delta B) = 0$. The equation $$ d(A,B) = \mu (A \Delta B)$$ defines a metric on $\mathcal{A}$ modulo equivalence.
Question: What information if any is encoded in this metric space?
Here is a trivial example: Assume that $X$ is a finite set, $\mathcal{A} = P(X)$ and $\mu$ is the counting measure. We can give $P(X)$ the structure of an undirected graph: Join $A$ and $B$ by an edge if they differ by a point. Then the metric induced on $\mathcal{A}$ by the measure is exactly the graph metric (i.e the distance between two points is the length of the shortest path).