When Tim Berner-Lee invented the World Wide Web in 1991, it was a bit of a misnomer--at the time, virtually all of the world's five million internet users were concentrated in just 12 countries, and 70 percent were dialing up from within the United States alone.
But, as today's infographic demonstrates, the WWW has become significantly more worldwide over the past two decades. By 2010, more than 2 billion people--or about one-third of the global population--had access to the internet, up from something like .05 percent in 1990, and less than 10 percent of users worldwide now reside in the U.S:
But I found some of the trends in the chart perplexing--what does it mean, for instance, that Malaysia makes an appearance on the chart in 1998, but then disappears around 2009? Is it just that Malaysia's population wasn't growing fast enough to make it visible on the chart, or did the spread of internet access in Malaysia suddenly slow? And did the sharp decline of U.S. users relative to the rest of the world reflect a lack of growth in the U.S., or just a sharp increase in other places? Clearly, China's population is much larger than the United States's., but that country also has about twice as many internet users. Could it be that a higher percentage of Chinese than Americans have access to the internet?
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