Date post: | 17-Jan-2015 |
Category: |
Business |
Upload: | vincent-tessier |
View: | 894 times |
Download: | 3 times |
Q2 2011 State of the Internet WebinarNovember 15, 2011
David Belson, AkamaiRichard Möller, Ericsson
Svante Bergqvist, Ericsson
November 15, 2011
Agenda
• Security• Observed Attack Traffic• Observed Attack Traffic• SSL
• Internet Connectivity• IPv4• IPv6
• Average & Peak Connection Speeds• Average & Peak Connection Speeds• High Broadband & Broadband Adoption• Mobile Insight (from Ericsson)g ( )• Internet Disruptions & Outages• Q & A
FASTER FORWARD © 2011 Akamai2
Sources of Observed Attack Traffic
• Myanmar no longer top source, but still near top of the list• Nearly half of attacks targeting Port 80 (WWW) came from Myanmar• Observed attack traffic distribution:
• 47% from APAC• 30% from Europe
FASTER FORWARD © 2011 Akamai3
• 20% from Americas• 3% from Africa
Top Ports Targeted by Observed Attacks
• Port 80 (WWW) also a top target from Indonesia, Russia, the United States (as well as Myanmar)
• Nearly 70% of attacks targeting Port 1433 (MS SQL Server) originated in China
• Data from third-party ‘honeypot’ system largely aligned with observations from Akamai’s network
FASTER FORWARD © 2011 Akamai4
observations from Akamai s network
Client-Side SSL Cipher Observations
• What is an “SSL Cipher”?• What is an SSL Cipher ?• Trends indicate that SSL is getting safer & more secure over time
• Adoption of newer browsers• Government & Industry regulations
FASTER FORWARD © 2011 Akamai5
Government & Industry regulations
IPv4 Addresses Seen By Akamai
• Over 604 million IPv4 addresses from 238 countries/regions connected to Akamai in Q2 2011
• Top 10 countries account for just over 68% of global figure• Rate of YoY change in the United States has been slowing over
the last several quarters – peaked at 18% in Q3 2010
FASTER FORWARD © 2011 Akamai6
World IPv6 Day – June 8, 2011
• What was “World IPv6 Day”?What was World IPv6 Day ?• IPv6 traffic on Akamai peaked shortly after World IPv6 Day began• www.akamai.com/ipv6• With limited IPv4 address space available planning for IPv6
FASTER FORWARD © 2011 Akamai7
• With limited IPv4 address space available, planning for IPv6 adoption is critical.
Global Average Connection Speeds
• Strong QoQ & YoY growth seen in global average speed• Asia holds top three spots, while balance of Top 10 is European• Globally, 29 qualifying countries/regions had average connection
d f 1 Mb l
FASTER FORWARD © 2011 Akamai8
speeds of 1 Mbps or less• Lebanon was slowest, at 379 kbps
Regional Average Connection Speed Comparison
• Greatest range in average speeds seen across APAC countries• Average speeds in top U.S. states compare favorably to top
European countries
FASTER FORWARD © 2011 Akamai9
p• General trend towards increased average speeds over time
Global Average Peak Connection Speeds
• Solid quarterly and strong yearly growth seen in global average • Solid quarterly and strong yearly growth seen in global average peak connection speed (second consecutive quarter >10 Mbps)
• Average peak speeds >10 Mbps seen in 69 countries• Among qualifying countries Guinea-Bissau’s 1 5 Mbps was the
FASTER FORWARD © 2011 Akamai10
• Among qualifying countries, Guinea Bissau s 1.5 Mbps was the slowest average peak connection speed
Regional Avg Peak Connection Speed Comparison
• Again, greatest range in speeds seen among APAC countries• Approximately half of surveyed APAC countries & European
countries had peak speeds above 20 Mbps; so did 30 U.S. states
FASTER FORWARD © 2011 Akamai11
• 30 Mbps appears to be a key threshold – few countries/states above it, otherwise they are well below it
Global High Broadband Adoption
M th t f ll ti t Ak i i Q2 2011 t • More than a quarter of all connections to Akamai in Q2 2011 were at speeds above 5 Mbps
• Of the 59 countries that qualified for inclusion:• Only India (0 4%) and China (0 6%) have adoption rates <1%
FASTER FORWARD © 2011 Akamai12
• Only India (0.4%) and China (0.6%) have adoption rates <1%• Adoption rates >25% in 29 countries
Regional High Broadband Adoption Comparison
• Wide range of adoption rates seen in both Europe & APAC• High broadband adoption >70% only seen in U.S. states• Multiple European countries & U.S. states in 30% range –
FASTER FORWARD © 2011 Akamai13
Multiple European countries & U.S. states in 30% range in APAC, only Singapore
Global Broadband Adoption
Nearly two thirds of all connections to Akamai in Q2 2011 were at • Nearly two-thirds of all connections to Akamai in Q2 2011 were at speeds above 2 Mbps
• Tight clustering in the 90% range among the Top 10 countries• Among qualifying countries/regions Venezuela had the lowest
FASTER FORWARD © 2011 Akamai14
• Among qualifying countries/regions, Venezuela had the lowest level of broadband adoption (2.0%)
Regional Broadband Adoption Comparison
• Very strong broadband adoption across European countries –multiple countries >90%; only Hong Kong >90% in APAC
• Delaware plateauing at ~98% broadband adoption
FASTER FORWARD © 2011 Akamai15
Delaware plateauing at 98% broadband adoption• Among qualifying countries, Philippines & India were the only two
with broadband adoption rates below 10%
Global Voice/Data Traffic In Cellular Networks
• Volume of mobile data traffic doubled from Q2 2010 – Q2 2011• Mobile data traffic volume is now over 2x mobile voice traffic
FASTER FORWARD © 2011 Akamai16
Ratio of Active Smartphone Users
• For new iPhone & Android smartphones. 50-75% of subscribers
FASTER FORWARD © 2011 Akamai17
generate >1 MB of traffic per day, on average
Smartphone Traffic Volumes for Active Users
• Median weekly traffic volume for “active” (>1 MB) smartphone
FASTER FORWARD © 2011 Akamai18
users ranges between 30-80 MB for most smartphone models
Application Traffic Across Subscriber Clusters(new high-end Android model)
• Heavy users spend two orders of magnitude more time watching
FASTER FORWARD © 2011 Akamai19
online video w/ their smartphones than median users(~40 min/day for heaviest 5% vs. 0.5 min/day for median)
Internet Disruptions & Outages
• Syria saw an Internet disruption on June that lasted 24-36 hours• Connectivity in Syria relies primarily on one domestic provider• Akamai saw traffic into Syria drop significantly during this time
FASTER FORWARD © 2011 Akamai20
• Akamai saw traffic into Syria drop significantly during this time
http://www.akamai.com/stateoftheinternet
FASTER FORWARD © 2011 Akamai21
Q&A
• twitter.com/akamai_soti
• Ericsson Traffic & Market Data Report• http://www.ericsson.com/news/1561267• http://hugin.info/1061/R/1561267/483187.pdf
FASTER FORWARD © 2011 Akamai22