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Here’s what we all did on the internet last year

Image: Ronald Eikelenboom via Flickr

WEB TRAFFIC MONITORING company Pingdom makes it their business to track what we get up to on the internet. Their report for 2011 is out – and there are some mind-boggling figures on how we surfed, procrastinated and generally wasted hours on the internet last year.

Here’s how we did it:

100 billion photos on Facebook by mid-2011

4.5 million photos uploaded to Flickr each day

Apple iPhone 4 the most popular camera used on Flickr

1 trillion video playbacks on Youtube

4,189,214 new users on Vimeo

5.9 million – the estimated number of mobile subscriptions worldwide in 2011

100 million active Twitter users in 2011 (225m accounts)

250 million tweets per day (from Oct 2011)

800+ million Facebook users

200 million – number of users added to FB during 2011

The most viewed video on YouTube in 2011 was Rebecca Black’s Friday

#egypt was the number one hashtag on Twitter

70 million WordPress blogs

2.4bn social networking accounts worldwide

Internet explorer has biggest share of global desktop web browser market (39 percent); followed by Chrome (28), Firefox 25; Safari 6 and others

2.1bn internet users worldwide

45 per cent of internet users are under the age of 25

476.2m internet users in Europe

$2.6m – the price for social.com, the most expensive domain name sold in 2011

555 million websites existed on the internet in December 2011. 300m websites were added in 2011 alone.

3.146bn email accounts worldwide

40 years since the first email was sent

71 per cent of worldwide email traffic was spam (in Nov 2011)

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Comments (13 Comments)

  • Yeera Yeahboy 29/01/12 #
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    Interesting stats. However it ignores the rather large elephant in the room, which is under-dressed and posing provocatively.

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  • Jim Cunningham 29/01/12 #
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    Not surprised at that last one about the spam anyway. There was talk a few years back of introducing a small charge per email. Even though I know we all could do without more charges, would that not be a great way of hitting the accounts that are sending unreasonable amounts of mail. If that worked, I think I’d set up with the charge.

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    • ChrisDuffin 29/01/12 #
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      Not only would that be impossible to police, it’s highly impractical and wouldn’t work anyway as much of the spam is sent from rogue servers rather than legitimate email accounts. And how do you deal with hijacked email accounts? If someone stole your email log in details and began sending spam in your name, should you be expected to pay for it all?

  • Yeera Yeahboy 29/01/12 #
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    Elephants can be quite charming

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  • Rodger O Waters 29/01/12 #
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    I know what a hash brown is but a hash tag? I’ll try the interweb.

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  • Nigel Briganti 29/01/12 #
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    800 million trillion: Number of users who watched porn in 2011

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  • jimbo 29/01/12 #
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    how many hits did the journal get?

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    • Tom McDermott 29/01/12 #
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      http://www.alexa.com/siteinfo/thejournal.ie# Thejournal.ie has a three-month global Alexa traffic rank of 16,594. Relative to the overall population of internet users, the site’s users are disproportionately childless, and they are disproportionately men browsing from work who have postgraduate educations and have incomes between $30,000 and $100,000. The site has a relatively good traffic rank in the cities of New Ross (#4) and Kilkenny (#11). Thejournal.ie has attained a traffic rank of 59 among users in Ireland, where we estimate that 57% of its audience is located.

      Not a bad ranking out of 900+ million websites in the world

    • Cpm 29/01/12 #
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      A tip , Tom – Alexa is possibly the least trustworthy source of stats on the www. No web professional takes it seriously.

  • pagan 29/01/12 #
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    Send these stats to the government before Tuesday to show the freedom of the internet.Come wensday morning the internet in Ireland will belong to the nanny state.

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  • Tom McDermott 29/01/12 #
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    @Cpm Cheers, agreed… but It gives jimbo a basic idea to the question that he asked.

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