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694 million people online worldwide: survey
PhysOrg ^ | May 05, 2006 May 05, 2006 May 5, 2006 | AFP

Posted on 05/05/2006 8:57:02 AM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach

People try computers at an IT fair

Some 694 million people worldwide over age 15 are now using the Internet, about 14 percent of the total population in this age group, according to a survey released Thursday.


The report by research firm comScore Networks claims to be "the first true estimate of global online audience size and behavior" using consistent methodology.

The estimate was based on a survey of major markets including China and India.

"Today, the online audience in the US represents less than a quarter of Internet users across the globe, versus 10 years ago when it accounted for two-thirds of the global audience," said Peter Daboll, president and chief executive of comScore Media Metrix.

According to the report, the United States still had the single largest Internet audience, of 152 million users, followed by China with 72 million.

The figures differ from some other surveys and official data -- China for example is believed to have over 100 million Web users -- because the comScore data excludes those under 15 or those accessing the Internet from cybercafes, mobile phones or digital assistants.

Third on the list was Japan with 52 million users, followed by Germany (32 million) and Britain (30 million).

In sixth place was South Korea (24.6 million) followed by France (23.9 million), Canada (19 million), Italy 16.8 million and India (16.7 million).

Rounding out the top 15 countries were Brazil (13.2 million), Spain (12.5 million), Netherlands (11 million), Russia (10.8 million) and Australia (9.7 million)

In terms on most time spent online, Israel led the list, with the average user spending 57.5 hours online during the month -- twice as much time compared to the average person in the United States.

Rounding out the top five in this category were Finland, South Korea, the Netherlands and Taiwan.

The data showed "high levels of engagement in countries outside the US. In fact, the US does not even make the top 15 country list in terms of hours per user per month," said Daboll.



Among the top websites worldwide, Microsoft's MSN sites headed the list with 538.6 million global users, followed by Google (495.8 million users), and Yahoo (480.2 million users).

© 2006 AFP


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: worldwideweb
Hat Tip to HardOCP.
1 posted on 05/05/2006 8:57:06 AM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
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To: All; Mr. Brightside; bd476
Earlier story:

< 40 Million Just Hang Out Online Each Day (just to pass time)

******************************************

BD476 Just found this incredible Earth Mapping Tool.

It's the

Jules Verne Voyager Interactive Map Tool for the Web

2 posted on 05/05/2006 9:03:28 AM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach (History is soon Forgotten,)
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach

I find these numbers hard to believe, but I understand the motive behind them. The UN wants to control the net. Why should the USA have control over it when they only account for 1/4 of the users will be added to their cries.

They may not have food in Africa, but the have high speed internet.


3 posted on 05/05/2006 9:29:18 AM PDT by Nathan Zachary
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Some 694 million people worldwide over age 15 are now using the Internet

And I think I've gotten SPAM from every single one of them.

4 posted on 05/05/2006 9:30:03 AM PDT by kevkrom (Posting snarky comments so you don't have to)
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To: rdb3; chance33_98; Calvinist_Dark_Lord; Bush2000; PenguinWry; GodGunsandGuts; CyberCowboy777; ...

5 posted on 05/05/2006 9:31:27 AM PDT by ShadowAce (Linux -- The Ultimate Windows Service Pack)
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To: Nathan Zachary

>They may not have food in Africa, but the have high speed
>internet.

That way the can at least read about or see
food http://www.wftv.com/foodnews/9165824/detail.html
freedom http://www.tdc.ca/parliamentwebcam.htm
and other frivolities http://www.iseepet.com/frame.asp
of our pampered existence.


6 posted on 05/05/2006 10:33:18 AM PDT by kpp_kpp
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To: Nathan Zachary
I find these numbers hard to believe, but I understand the motive behind them. The UN wants to control the net...

Before we issue a black helicopter alert we might want to first take a look at the people who came up with the number (comScore) and PhysOrg.com, the folks that reported it.  I couldn't find even any indirect UN links, which is just fine as I'm almost out of tin-foil.

I've seen places with internet 30 miles from the nearest electrical line, places without even cell phone coverage.  One out of 10 of the world's population being on line sounds about right.

7 posted on 05/05/2006 10:46:43 AM PDT by expat_panama
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach

Interesting post. Lots of people...


8 posted on 05/05/2006 11:15:27 AM PDT by Mrs. Darla Ruth Schwerin
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To: expat_panama; Nathan Zachary; Mrs. Darla Ruth Schwerin
Found this:

ComScore: Spyware or 'researchware'?

****************************************

http://www.news.com/

ComScore: Spyware or 'researchware'?

By Stefanie Olsen
http://news.com.com/ComScore+Spyware+or+researchware/2100-1032_3-5494004.html

Story last modified Mon Dec 20 06:22:57 PST 2004

<
A battle has broken out over the proper definition of "spyware," pitting a Net research provider against critics who see little difference between its software and illicit programs that record personal data without consent.

ComScore Networks' Marketscore application is installed on more than 1 million PCs in the United States, forming the backbone of a well-regarded research service used by Fortune 500 companies, universities and media outlets, including CNET News.com. Now the software is in the privacy spotlight, tied to warnings from some universities and computer security experts about secretive and invasive software, sometimes known as adware or spyware, that can take over a PC with little or no warning.

ComScore denies the charges and is preparing to go on the offensive with a lobby campaign aimed at legitimizing data collection products such as Marketscore. A ComScore proposal currently being shopped to security firms and Internet service providers would create a new "researchware" label for its software in order to explicitly distinguish it from badly behaved spyware products.

News.context

What's new:
ComScore's Marketscore application is in the privacy spotlight, tied to warnings from some universities and computer security experts about adware and spyware.

Bottom line:
The controversy over the widely used data collection tool could help define limits of legitimate software behavior.

More stories on this topic

"There's a small group of people in universities who've taken it upon themselves to take an issue with our software," said Dan Hess, senior vice president of industry analysis at ComScore. "We're trying to make them fully aware of the nature of our (products and services). It's a completely voluntary program."

What's in a name? Quite a bit, it turns out, if you happen to make your living tracking the private lives of millions of consumers over the Web.

Labels such as spyware and adware cut a wide swath, with many gray areas that can spark disagreements among software makers, consumers and security experts over legitimate and illegitimate practices. Now these basic categories are poised for an overhaul, as federal spyware legislation moves forward and companies like ComScore push for finer definitions from the security companies that are largely responsible for classifying specific products one way or the other.

Depending on how these changes are handled, consumers could face an even more bewildering labyrinth of warnings and terminology over little-understood products such as Marketscore and dozens of other products up for grabs on the Web.

Webroot Software, an Internet security company that counts Microsoft and EarthLink among its customers, said it plans to unveil a new category of potential threats in the next version of its security software, due out in the next few months.

"We're going to have an 'other' category, where we'll be able to identify things like Marketscore, describe what it does, and give users an option to remove it," said Richard Stiennon, vice president of threat research at Webroot. "It's ironic. When we do focus groups with consumers, they say they have too much information. So they're not going to be happy, but we're going to do it."

Webroot currently identifies Marketscore as a subcategory ofspyware, known as a "system monitor," that tracks user behavior for marketing purposes.

Other software programs that are designed to detect and remove spyware and adware applications have warned users off Marketscore, too. Spybot Search and Destroy, for example, labels it spyware, and Ad-Aware dubs it a "data miner" for removal.

In fact, many in the Internet industry want better classifications for spyware and other tracking software because, too often, everything gets lumped together. For example, earlier this year, Webroot and EarthLink estimated that the majority of people have spyware on their computers. But the companies' classification of spyware included "cookies" that can be useful for people's PCs to recall passwords. Even sites like entertainment provider iFilm, which distributes an application for watching movie trailers, has been labeled as spyware.

"We do capture information, including data that occurs in secure sessions, to get information like what a person buys."
--Chris Lin, chief privacy officer, ComScore

That's why security software makers like Symantec plan to improve information they have on the threat level of software circulating the Internet. "Rather than new categories, we're focusing on new classifications for understanding risk, to help people make decisions about what it is they want to block and what it is they are OK with," said Vincent Weafer, director of security software for Symantec.

For ComScore, the data it compiles is used to create reports tracking e-commerce sales trends, Web site traffic and online advertising campaigns, to name a few. In a few years, it has risen from obscurity to challenge larger rivals such as Nielsen/NetRatings.

ComScore freely admits that it tracks the activities of its customers, also called "panelists." But it insists that it fully discloses its practices and protects the privacy of its customers by providing only aggregate data for its reports. It also promises to strip out and discard any information that could connect data back to a particular individual.

"We do capture information, including data that occurs in secure sessions, to get information like what a person buys," said Chris Lin, ComScore's chief privacy officer. "We do that with full disclosure, and we scrub the personally identifiable information."

The company also has had its privacy policy, practices and data security audited by independent accounting firm Ernst & Young.

Despite ComScore's claims that it provides clear disclosure and consent, some privacy experts said controversy over its software highlights gray zones for data collection companies. For example, even companies that fully disclose software behavior may nevertheless undermine public perceptions of notice and consent if their disclosure documentation is overly dense or poorly worded.

"They may be upfront up about it, and you can put the pieces together, but it requires a full understanding of network security and of legalese," said Steven Jay Schuster, security director at Cornell University, which recently warned students of potential spyware dangers in Marketscore. "Most people don't really understand all the information that's collected about them on the Internet, and to me it's playing on that."

Spyware is commonly thought of as software that's downloaded onto a PC without clearly disclosing all of its functions or obtaining permission from the computer's owner. It typically slips onto a person's machine unnoticed as a scantly disclosed add-on with other popular applications, such as file-sharing software, or via browser security vulnerabilities.

Spyware denies people reasonable control over the application, for example, the ability to easily uninstall it. And, as its name implies, it typically spies on people while they're surfing the Web. It can collect passwords, bank statements and any matter of personal data, down to the keystroke. In a more benign form, known as adware, such programs can be used to send ads based on people's interests.

"Most people don't really understand all the information that's collected about them on the Internet, and to me it's playing on that."
--Steven Jay Schuster, security director, Cornell University

"Researchware," by contrast, can collect all the same personal information, but it gives people notice, choice, anonymity and control to uninstall the program, according to ComScore's working definition.

Marketscore is a downloadable application that purports to speed up Internet surfing, and in partnership with Symantec, protect e-mail from viruses. In exchange for these services and with the subject's permission, it will track people's Web surfing habits and compile "clickstream" data for research purposes, for example, extrapolate the most popular Web sites among a sample population.

To compile data, Marketscore redirects Internet traffic through its own servers and decrypts secure data transfers between a PC user and a Web site using Secure Sockets Layer (SSL), the de facto security standard for e-commerce transactions. Doing so, it can collect highly personal information, including bank passwords, health data and credit card numbers.

Because ComScore acts as a proxy server, panelists do not have direct access to the Internet. If Marketscore were to break, for example, users might lose their online connection, or more troubling, be exposed to a potentially damaging security breach. ComScore said it has never had a security breach in its five years of operation.

In fact, ComScore's track record has won the trust of some Internet industry heavyweights that have studied its practices, including America Online.

"The main ComScore panel doesn't constitute spyware," said AOL spokesman Andrew Weinstein. "All the disclosures meet our standards. We're working with ComScore to differentiate their research panels with software, which involves surveys. That might be in a grayer area. But all of their products are fine with us."

Not everyone is comfortable with ComScore's setup, however. Consent aside, security experts said third-party proxies should carry red flags for anyone concerned about the privacy of their personal data and the sanctity of their computer.

"From an overall security perspective, I would never recommend that to happen," said Webroot's Stiennon. "That's the one case where all of your activity can be sniffed and tracked. Even if it was the most reputable company in the world, I would not recommend that practice."

ComScore has a panel of 1.5 million people in the United States who use its software, and by doing so, report their behaviors. With the software, ComScore has built a reputable research business in recent years with less investment than traditional, random digit-dial research panels. Its star has risen since the dot-com bust thanks to the credibility of its large panel size and data. The company sells data to major Internet companies, universities and the media.

But as high-speed Internet service has proliferated in recent years--making its Internet accelerator software less enticing to consumers--ComScore has had to find new incentives and avenues for distribution. For example, it runs JD Academic Research Council, or JDCouncil.org, which offers students $5 or $10 for using Marketscore.

"Some companies fall into the middle, and there's a push back and forth as to whether they're the good guys or bad guys."
--Ari Schwartz, policy analyst, Center for Democracy and Technology

The company has reportedly bundled its software with peer-to-peer applications like iMesh, which are popular with students.

But recently, the company's distribution efforts have hit a snag in academia.

Columbia University and Cornell have begun blocking Marketscore from their networks and students' PCs, and issued spyware warnings on the software. Other schools, including Pennsylvania State University, Indiana State University, California State University and North Dakota University, also are looking into the software.

"It wasn't causing adverse performance effects to our network, but you might imagine if you're a student and logging on to what you think is a secure site, and it's not, and it records your credit card information. That's why we decided to be a little more active on this," Cornell's Schuster said.

Because Marketscore's Web page contains only a buried reference to ComScore, some people say it appears secretive and raises suspicion. JDCouncil.org does not openly refer to ComScore either, except within a company information page.

The controversy comes as spyware is of mounting concern to consumers, information technology managers and corporations. As more Net companies begin to offer tools for consumers to fight it, spyware makers are getting trickier, exploiting Web browser flaws to get onto people's PCs and making it nearly impossible to uninstall their software.

As a result, several states, including California, have anti-spyware bills to ban unauthorized installation of spyware on unsuspecting computer users. Congress is also drafting a federal law to protect consumers from spyware. In October, the U.S. House of Representatives approved the proposed Spy Act, which prohibits companies and individuals from "taking control" of a computer, surreptitiously modifying the URL of a Web browser's home page or disabling antivirus software without the proper authorization.

In other news:

Ari Schwartz, policy analyst for the Center for Democracy and Technology, said that generally speaking, as long as two parties consent to certain practices related to software, then those practices are legal, even if they involve peering into secure transactions.

Still, when it comes to conventions on the Internet like obtaining consumer consent, certain practices have been exploited, Schwartz said, referring to a recent case against spam king Sanford Wallace. Using Active X controls to dupe people into installing software they don't need or miswording questionnaires next to a check box are common tricks, Schwartz said.

On the flip side, companies like eBay have established high levels of consent among buyers and sellers. But there is a whole gray area in between, he said.

"Some companies fall into the middle, and there's a push back and forth as to whether they're the good guys or bad guys," Schwartz said.

CNET News.com's Evan Hansen contributed to this report.

9 posted on 05/05/2006 11:35:34 AM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach (History is soon Forgotten,)
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To: expat_panama
Did someone say Black Helicopters???

This explains everything!


10 posted on 05/05/2006 11:40:16 AM PDT by null and void (Hillary!™ would have been a big astronaut. Say that slowly)
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach

FWIW, immediately after I went to that comScore site my computer started bogging down with ads and I had to run adAware to clean it all out. Now I'm seeing a connection.


11 posted on 05/05/2006 12:32:27 PM PDT by expat_panama
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To: null and void

Then again, that spyware could also have been seeded by blackhelicopters...


12 posted on 05/05/2006 12:32:48 PM PDT by expat_panama
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach

"Muuust... FReeeeeep...."

13 posted on 05/05/2006 12:35:07 PM PDT by Serb5150 (Christ is risen! Indeed He is risen!)
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To: expat_panama

I'm running Vector Linux,....didn't notice a thing....


14 posted on 05/05/2006 1:15:05 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach (History is soon Forgotten,)
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach

Thanks so very much for the post/links. It was an insightful read. Seems like ever since, GooGle started cutting corners it put the wheels in motion for other computer folks to jump on the bandwagon to see what they could get away with...


15 posted on 05/05/2006 1:16:17 PM PDT by Mrs. Darla Ruth Schwerin
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach

Oh sure, Ernest, bring my name into this.






LOL! Thanks for the Ping and the link to an earlier thread.


16 posted on 05/05/2006 1:21:31 PM PDT by bd476
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach; Global2010; BurbankKarl; lainie; Joy Angela; MeekOneGOP; Lijahsbubbe; ...
BTW, Ernest, why did you ping me to this? It is a rare occasion when I'm online, ever.

Seriously.

I mean it. ;-)
17 posted on 05/05/2006 1:30:46 PM PDT by bd476
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
I'm running Vector Linux,....didn't notice a thing....

Figures, I'm running XP and IE.  My next project is going to be moving into an open source OS etc.

18 posted on 05/05/2006 2:23:03 PM PDT by expat_panama
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To: bd476

i ping rather freely, and I posted the link to your excellent Jules Verne website.....a good reason for people to go online, but maybe all 694 million have not yet seen it.

They should look though...


19 posted on 05/05/2006 2:59:17 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach (History is soon Forgotten,)
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Some 694 million people worldwide over age 15 are now using the Internet, about 14 percent of the total population in this age group, according to a survey released Thursday.

In other words...

Some 4.005 billion people worldwide over age 15 are not using the Internet, about 86 percent of the total population in this age group, according to a survey released Thursday.

Survey Says: ...Bushes Fault

20 posted on 05/05/2006 4:20:39 PM PDT by mountn man (Growing old is mandatory. Growing up is optional.)
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