- Global broadband adoption rate reaches 60%
- Global average and average peak connection speeds drop by 2.8% and 2.3%, respectively
- South Korea maintains highest level of 4K readiness, with two-thirds of connections to Akamai at or above 15 Mbps
Akamai Technologies, Inc. (NASDAQ: AKAM),
the leading provider of cloud services for delivering, optimizing and
securing online content and business applications, today released its Third Quarter, 2014 State of the Internet Report. Based on data gathered from the Akamai Intelligent Platform™,
the report provides insight into key global statistics such as
connection speeds and broadband adoption across fixed and mobile
networks, overall attack traffic, global 4K readiness, and IPv4
exhaustion and IPv6 implementation.
The
report also includes security insights into Shellshock and OpenSSL
vulnerabilities, Blackshades RAT and Spike DDoS toolkits, as well as
attacks observed during the FIFA 2014 World Cup.
Data and graphics from the Third Quarter, 2014 State of the Internet Report can be found on the Akamai State of the Internet site and through the Akamai State of the Internet app for iOS and Android devices.
"One
need only look to the sheer number of connected device- and smart
home-related announcements that came out of the 2015 International CES
to see that consumers are continuing to adopt and expect more from
connected technology and services," said David Belson,
editor of the report. "The strong year-over-year growth trends
illustrated in this quarter's report show that the Internet is evolving
and expanding to meet the growing demands of our increasingly connected
lifestyles."
Highlights from Akamai's Third Quarter, 2014 State of the Internet Report:
Global Average Connection Speeds and Global Broadband ConnectivityFor
the second consecutive quarter, the global average connection speed
remained above the 4 Mbps "broadband" threshold; however, it saw a
slight decline in the third quarter of 2014, dropping 2.8% to 4.5 Mbps.
Six
of the top 10 countries saw increases in global average connection
speeds, and all of the top 10 remained well above the 10 Mbps "high
broadband" threshold. Among those increasing in average connection speed
quarter-over-quarter, Singapore experienced the largest rise (12.2 Mbps), an 18% improvement. The smallest growth was in Japan (15 Mbps), which was only up 0.8% from the second quarter. In addition, Ireland (13.9 Mbps) joined Singapore
in seeing an increase of 10% or more from the previous quarter. Yearly
increases were seen in 129 qualifying countries/regions, with rates
ranging from 150% in Jersey (9.7 Mbps) down to a modest 0.2% in Ecuador (3.6 Mbps).
Similar
to the average connection speed metric, the global average peak
connection speed also saw a slight decline in the third quarter,
dropping 2.3% to 24.8 Mbps. Hong Kong once again had the highest average peak connection speed at 84.6 Mbps, followed closely by Singapore (83 Mbps). All 10 countries/regions saw significant increases in average peak connection speeds compared to the previous year. Uruguay (58.6 Mbps) led the group with a year-over-year change of 334%, and Luxembourg
(54.4 Mbps) saw speeds more than double, up 130%. A total of 135
qualifying countries/regions saw average peak connection speeds increase
from the third quarter of 2013.
Global
high broadband (>10 Mbps) adoption rates fell 0.5% in the third
quarter, after seeing strong quarterly growth earlier in the year. In
contrast to previous quarters, changes among the top 10
countries/regions were limited, with increases ranging from a half a
percent in Japan (55% adoption) to 8.4% in Sweden
(44% adoption). Among the 63 qualifying countries/regions for this
metric, just 28 saw quarter-over-quarter increases. The global high
broadband adoption rate was up 22%, which was lower than the 65%
increases seen in both the first and second quarters of this year. Among
the top 10 countries/regions, Japan was the only one to see a year-over-year change below 10%, while both Romania (49% adoption) and Israel (44% adoption) saw adoption rates more than double. Across the other 62 geographies, yearly increases ranged from 6.3% in Japan to a massive 3,015% in Uruguay (7.3% adoption).
The
global broadband (>4 Mbps) adoption rate reached 60%, an increase of
1% quarter-over-quarter. Ninety-nine countries/regions qualified for
inclusion for this metric, 55 of which saw quarterly growth in broadband
adoption rates. Israel (92% adoption) was the only country in the top 10 country/regions to see its adoption rate increase more than 1%. South Korea remained the country with the highest level of broadband adoption at 96%, with Bulgaria
following at 95%. The global broadband adoption rate increased 12% from
the third quarter of 2013. While still positive, the yearly growth rate
has continued to decline over the last several quarters. Broadband
adoption rates were also up-year-over-year across all of the top 10
countries/regions, with increases ranging from 1.3% in Curacao to 18% in Bulgaria.
All but nine qualifying countries saw broadband adoption levels
increase over the past year with growth rates ranging from 0.7% in the Czech Republic (83% adoption) to 1,884% in Indonesia (35% adoption).
4K ReadinessFollowing the introduction of "4K Readiness" in the First Quarter, 2014 State of the Internet Report,
Akamai has again identified candidate geographies that are most likely
to sustain connection speeds above 15 Mbps, as Ultra HD adaptive bitrate
streams typically require bandwidth between 10 and 20 Mbps. The
findings do not account for other "readiness" factors, including
availability of 4K-encoded content or 4K-capable televisions and media
players.
In
total, 52 countries/regions qualified for inclusion this quarter, and
12% of the global connections were at or above the 15 Mbps threshold.
While down 2.8% quarter-over-quarter, readiness increased 32%
year-over-year. South Korea remained the country with the highest level of 4K readiness, with two-thirds of its connections to Akamai at or above 15 Mbps.
Attack Traffic and SecurityAkamai
maintains a distributed set of unadvertised agents deployed across the
Internet to log connection attempts that the company classifies as
attack traffic. Based on the data collected by these agents, Akamai is
able to identify the top countries from which attack traffic originates,
as well as the top ports targeted by these attacks. It is important to
note, however, that the originating country as identified by the source
IP address may not represent the nation in which an attacker resides.
In
the third quarter of 2014, Akamai observed attack traffic originating
from 201 unique countries/regions, which was up significantly from 161
in the second quarter, and more in line with the 194 seen in the first
quarter. As demonstrated in past reports, the highest concentration of
attacks (50%) came from China, nearly three times more than the United States, which saw observed traffic grow by approximately 25% quarter-over-quarter. China and the United States were the only two countries to originate more than 10% of observed global attack traffic. Indonesia
was the only country among the top 10 to see observed attack traffic
decline, dropping from 15% of global attack traffic in the second
quarter to 1.9% in the third. The overall concentration of observed
attack traffic decreased slightly in the third quarter, with the top 10
countries/regions originating 82% of observed attacks, down from 84%
last quarter. Furthermore, 64% of attack traffic originated from the Asia Pacific region, down from 70% last quarter, while the lowest volume (1%) originated from Africa.
The
volume of observed traffic targeting Ports 80 (HTTP/WWW), 443
(HTTPS/SSL) and 880 (HTTP Alternate) dropped significantly in the third
quarter, with all three ports seeing a fraction of the attack volume
seen in previous quarters. Port 23 remained the most popular target of
attacks observed to be originating in China, accounting for more than three times more volume than Port 80, the second-most attacked port within the country.
Reported Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) Attack TrafficIn addition to observations on attack traffic, the State of the Internet Report
includes insight into DDoS attacks based on reports from Akamai's
customers. Akamai customers reported 270 DDoS attacks for the second
quarter in a row. Overall, this represents a 4.5% reduction in attacks
since the beginning of 2014 and a 4% decrease in comparison to the third
quarter of 2013.
In contrast to the second quarter's report, the number of attacks fell in both of the Americas, with 142 attacks, and in the Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) region, with 44 attacks. However, the number of attacks in the Asia Pacific
(APAC) region rose by 25% from the previous quarter to 84. The
distribution of industries did not change in comparison to the previous
quarter; commerce, enterprise, high tech, media and entertainment, and
the public sector all saw the same number of attacks as the previous
quarter, even though the actual targets of these attacks changed.
Compared with the same quarter of 2013, enterprise attacks have fallen
by more than a third from 127 to 80. At the same time, attacks against
high tech companies have tripled from 14 to 42.
Akamai
saw an increase in the number of repeated attacks against the same
target in the third quarter, returning to the 25% chance of a subsequent
attack targeting the same organization. This represents a drop in
unique targets from 184 in the second quarter to 174 in the third.
IPv4 and IPv6In
the third quarter of 2014, more than 790 million IPv4 addresses
connected to the Akamai Intelligent Platform from more than 246 unique
countries/regions. The global number of unique IPv4 addresses making
requests to Akamai grew by nearly two million quarter-over-quarter, a
nominal increase after a loss of seven million in the second quarter.
Looking at the top 10 countries in the third quarter, the unique IP
count in the United States saw a small gain of approximately 20,000 addresses. In addition to the United States, Brazil, France and Russia
saw nominal increases in unique IPv4 address counts, while the
remaining six countries saw unique IPv4 address counts slightly decline
from the second quarter. Fifty-eight percent of countries saw a
quarter-over-quarter increase in unique IPv4 address counts, with 28
countries/regions growing by 10% or more.
Cable
and wireless providers continued to drive the number of IPv6 requests
made to Akamai, many of which are leading the way for IPv6 adoption in
their respective countries. Verizon Wireless and Brutele saw more than
half of their requests to Akamai made over IPv6, with Telenet close
behind.
Mobile ConnectivityIn the Third Quarter, 2014 State of the Internet Report, 54 countries/regions qualified in the mobile section. South Korea continued to have the highest average mobile connection speed, growing from 15.2 Mbps to 18.2 Mbps in the third quarter. Iran
had the lowest average mobile connection speed at 0.9 Mbps, and was the
only qualifying country with an average speed below 1 Mbps. Slovakia joined South Korea above the 10 Mbps "high broadband" threshold at 10.9 Mbps.
Average peak mobile connection speeds again spanned an extremely broad range in the third quarter, from 98 Mbps in Singapore down to 3.3 Mbps in Iran. Nine countries/regions had average peak mobile connection speeds above 50 Mbps, while another 40 saw speeds above 10 Mbps.
The
report also examines the percentage of connections to Akamai from
mobile network providers at "broadband" speeds (more than 4 Mbps). In
the third quarter, Sweden moved ahead of Denmark for the top position at an adoption rate of 94%, whereas Iran, Paraguay, Croatia, and Vietnam all had mobile broadband adoption rates below 1% in the third quarter.
Each quarter, Akamai publishes a "State of the Internet" report. This report includes data gathered from across the Akamai Intelligent Platform about attack traffic, broadband adoption, mobile connectivity and other relevant topics concerning the Internet and its usage, as well as trends seen in this data over time. To learn more and to access the archive of past reports, please visit www.stateoftheinternet.com. To download the figures from the Third Quarter, 2014 State of the Internet Report, please visit: wwwns.akamai.com/soti/soti_q314_figures.zip.
About AkamaiAkamai®
is the leading provider of cloud services for delivering, optimizing
and securing online content and business applications. At the core of
the Company's solutions is the Akamai Intelligent Platform™ providing
extensive reach, coupled with first class reliability, security,
visibility and expertise. Akamai removes the complexities of connecting
the increasingly mobile world, supporting 24/7 consumer demand, and
enabling enterprises to securely leverage the cloud. To learn more about
how Akamai is accelerating the pace of innovation in a hyperconnected
world, please visit www.akamai.com or blogs.akamai.com, and follow @Akamai on Twitter.
source:http://www.prnewswire.com/
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