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11/22/2024 05:20:48 am

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Internet Connectivity is Getting Faster, Says Worldwide Internet Survey

An Internet satellite

An Internet satellite

A comprehensive report on the global Internet by Akamai Technologies, Inc. presents a mixed picture of Internet progress.

Akamai's "First Quarter, 2014 State of the Internet Report" reveals that global average connection speeds and global broadband connectivity have indeed gotten faster. The report also found out that Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks have decreased.

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It also said that China was again responsible for originating the most number of "attack traffic" on the Internet.

Based in the U.S., Akamai is a provider of cloud services for delivering, optimizing and securing online content and business applications.

Akamai said the global average connection speed rose 1.8 percent in Q1. This extended its steady growth over recent quarters while year-on-year trends remained positive with a 13 percent increase.

However, the global average peak connection speeds fell 8.6 percent in Q1.

The global average connection speed stood at 3.9 megabits per second or Mbps as of Q1 and is expected to exceed 4 Mbps in Q2.

Global average connection speeds year-on-year improved by 24 percent with increases in all but seven countries/regions.

Nine of the top 10 countries/regions saw increases in average connection speeds. This included an 8 percent jump for first place South Korea (23.6 Mbps) compared to second place Japan (14.6 Mbps).

Of the top 10 countries, only the Czech Republic saw a drop in average connection speed, remaining in eighth place with a 1.9 percent drop.

A total of 43 qualifying countries/regions saw quarter-over-quarter increases in their average peak connection speeds, while 92 qualifying countries/regions saw declines.

Since the first quarter of 2013, global average peak connection speeds have increased 13 percent. Yearly growth rates among the top 10 countries/regions ranged from 0.3 percent in Hong Kong (66 Mbps) to a huge 206 percent in Uruguay (45.4 Mbps).

Global high broadband (>10 Mbps) adoption rates in the first quarter improved by 9.4 percent quarter-over-quarter, climbing above the 20 percent mark for the first time, to 21 percent.

All of the countries/regions in the top 10 had high broadband adoption rates of 30 percent, with South Korea (77 percent), Japan (54 percent) and Switzerland (45 percent) topping the list. The year-over-year growth rate was 65 percent, with six of the top 10 countries/regions seeing increases of 50 percent or more.

The global broadband (>4 Mbps) adoption rate grew a nominal 1.7 percent from the fourth quarter of 2013 to reach 56 percent in the first quarter of 2014.

Of the countries/regions that qualified, 76 had higher broadband adoption rates this quarter - growth ranged from 0.2 percent in Canada (82 percent adoption) to 1,208 percent in Sudan (21 percent adoption).

"While there continues to be room for improvement in high broadband adoption and average peak connection speeds in some areas of the world, the trends we're seeing remain very positive," said David Belson, the report author.

"Steady year-over-year growth suggests that a strong, global foundation is being built for the enjoyment of next generation content and services like 4K video and increasingly connected homes and offices, and that connectivity will continue to evolve to support the growing demands these emerging technologies will place on the Internet."

Globally, 11 percent of connections were at speeds of 15 Mbps or above in Q1. Seven of the top 10 countries/regions on the 4K readiness list overlapped with those on the global high broadband connectivity list.

South Korea led with 60 percent 4K readiness while Japan had 32 percent of its connections at that level in the first quarter. Of the top 10, the Czech Republic had the lowest level of 4K readiness with 17 percent. Overall, 47 countries/regions qualified for inclusion.

Akamai observed attack traffic originating from 194 unique countries/regions  or six more than the fourth quarter of 2013. China was again responsible for originating the most attacks, but dropped slightly from 43 percent in the fourth quarter of 2013 to 41 percent in the first quarter of 2014.

The United States followed in second place, but also saw a decline from 19 percent to 11 percent. Indonesia saw a slight uptick from 5.7 percent to 6.8 percent for third place.

Overall, the concentration of attacks fell significantly as compared to the fourth quarter of 2013, with the top 10 countries/regions originating 75 percent of observed attacks, down from 88 percent in the prior quarter.

Mobile Connectivity In the first quarter of 2014, average mobile connection speeds ranged from 1.0 Mbps in Argentina to 14.7 Mbps in South Korea.

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