Tuesday, April 30, 2013

World Internet Statistic

internet population 2007-2012
This year the number of Internet users worldwide reached 2.27 billion, almost exactly twice what it was in 5 years ago, 1.15 billion. We all know the Internet is big, but this kind of growth really puts things into perspective.


The Internet population has been swelling rapidly since the arrival of the World Wide Web (which rests firmly on top of the foundation provided by the Internet). It’s human nature to get used to changes, so most of us have a tendency to forget how rapidly the world has changed, and keeps changing.
And as the Internet population grows, so does the potential size of online services. One example of this extreme evolution is Facebook. Last year we noted that Facebook now has more users than the entire Internet had back in 2004, the year the social network was founded.
But now, let’s see what has happened with the Internet population in the last five years as it doubled. Where did the changes come from, and what observations can we make?

A closer look at the Internet population growth

Yes, that big world map at the start of this article tells much of the story, but if you like digging into the details you might want to read on.
Since 2007, the global Internet population has grown by 1.1 billion. Where did those new Internet users come from? Let’s have a look:
Share of internet growth
One of the big take-aways from this chart is that Asia not only has the largest Internet population, but that it is also growing the fastest by quite some margin.
Here is how the number of Internet users has changed per world region in the past 5 years:
  • Africa has gone from 34 million to 140 million, a 317% increase.
  • Asia has gone from 418 million to over 1 billion, a 143% increase.
  • Europe has gone from 322 million to 501 million, a 56% increase.
  • The Middle East has gone from 20 to 77 million, a 294% increase.
  • North America has gone from 233 to 273 million, a 17% increase.
  • Latin America (South & Central America) has gone from 110 to 236 million, a 114% increase.
  • Oceania (including Australia) has gone from 19 to 24 million, a 27% increase.

A few additional observations

  • Asia’s Internet population is now almost as large as the entire Internet population was 5 years ago.
  • Looking at just relative growth, Africa and the Middle East have increased the most, quadrupling the number of Internet users in each region.
  • 2012 heralded two nicely even milestones: Europe passing 500 million Internet users, and Asia passing 1 billion.
  • Europe is now twice as large as the United States in terms of Internet population.

A Moore’s Law for Internet user numbers?

After reading this article, you might ask yourself if the Internet population doubles every 5 years? Kind of a Moore’s Law for the Internet?
There’s actually a kind of Moore’s Law for the Internet which states that the Internet doubles in size every 5 years (there’s that interval again!), but it refers to infrastructure and not people. This was reported back in 2009, a discovery made by Chinese researchers.
To see if something similar applies to Internet user numbers, we’ve examined Internet population changes from the past decade, and it does seem to indicate that we are following this pattern, at least roughly. For example, the jump from 2002 to 2007 was also roughly a doubling of the number of Internet users.
That said, this is not really a law that scales. We’re limited by the actual world population, which isn’t growing at the pace necessary to maintain such a trend in the long run. If we assume it works until every man, woman and child on the planet has Internet access, we would reach the limit before the end of this decade.
For now, though, it looks to be a rule of thumb we can use when trying to make future estimates, as long as those estimates aren’t too far into the future. After all, only one third of the world’s population has access to the Internet today.
Data source: Internet user numbers from Internet World Stats, with some help from the good old Internet Archive to get old stats.
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