Blog
-
How Governments Can Identify Weaknesses in Their Country's Internet
Decision-makers and advocates can use Pulse to identify weaknesses in their local Internet ecosystem and make evidence-based, public policy decisions to address these.
Categories: -
How QUIC Helps You Seamlessly Connect to Different Networks
QUIC overcomes a key issue with TCP by assigning Connection IDs instead of IP addresses.
Categories: -
Why HTTP/3 is Eating the World
In this series, I’ll provide some context on what problems HTTP/3 solves, how it performs, why it’s seen such swift adoption, and what limitations it is still working to overcome.
Categories: -
How Hygienic is Your Website and Email Service?
New service is helping Internet users in Singapore and abroad to check the security hygiene of websites and email services.
Categories: -
IPv6 to Improve Performance for Spain's Telefónica Subscribers
Telefónica's recent IPv6 deployment on its Movistar and O2 mobile networks is expected to increase IPv6 capability for Spain.
Categories: -
Making Censorship Data More User Friendly
Collecting measurement data is only part of the process of characterizing censorship and making it useful.
Categories: -
Four of the World's Top 10 Populous Countries Driving IPv6 Adoption
With the two largest populations in the world, India and China are also boasting the most IPv6 users in the world.
Categories: -
Here Today, Gone Tomorrow
How common is it that DNSSEC signed ccTLDs revert to being unsigned?
Categories: -
Is the Classic Internet Still Relevant?
Development and innovation happening at the edge of the Internet is having a significant impact on its evolution.
Categories: -
Kazakhstan, Haiti Domains Secured
Kazakhstan and Haiti have joined 148 countries that have DNSSEC-enabled Top Level Domains.
Categories: -
Unitel Gets the IPv6 Ball Rolling in Mongolia
Mongolia's largest digital service provider, Unitel, recent IPv6 deployment is having an instant impact on the country's IPv6 capabilities.
Categories: -
DNSSEC Validation in 2022: Canadian ISPs Need To Take DNS Security Seriously
In 2022, DNSSEC validation in North America dropped from 40% to 32%.
Categories:












