Release notes
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17 March 2026
We've fixed an issue with active networks indicator on the country reports page. It was showing zero active networks for each country, and this was a bug.
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27 February 2026
We've updated how we refer to the different markets in the concentration endpoints in the API to reflect the names we use on the website.
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10 February 2026
We created the Concentration section of Pulse as a way to track the concentration and consolidation of the Internet services market over the long term. We know that this topic is vital to understanding and advocating for an Internet that’s reliable and available. With this update, our goal is to simplify and streamline the page so we can move it to the new Pulse platform.
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30 January 2026
We’ve recently migrated around 700 blog and news pages and re-run the translations, so there are some slight changes if you use the site in Spanish or French—we hope for the better. You might have noticed some ways that Pulse looks and behaves differently. We’ve been migrating everything from our previous Wordpress site to a Wagtail site that uses Django for the back end.
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20 January 2026
We’ve updated the Internet Resilience Index with more recent data, and we’ve fixed some bugs caused by a data import that didn’t go as planned.
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08 January 2026
We've fixed a couple of bugs in the data displayed on the country reports
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12 November 2025
We’ve updated the methodology we use to compile the Internet Society Pulse Internet Resilience Index (IRI). The IRI uses a range of data sources, and we update it on a regular basis. In this release, we’ve updated it to include 2024 data, but we’ve also updated both how we calculate and how we represent that data. The overall result is that the Index now provides data for 180 countries for the entire period from Q1 2019 to Q4 2024.
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05 November 2025
Introducing a new version of the Pulse IXP Tracker! The first version of the Tracker was released in July 2024. Since then, we’ve been gathering feedback from users and the broader Internet Society community. In September, we updated how we count IXPs, which reduced the total number reflected in the tracker, but made it more accurate. In this release, we’ve made a big upgrade, with more data, an updated look and feel, improved structure, and more ways for Internet advocates to make the case for IXP development.
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30 October 2025
We fixed a bug in how we calculate historical data for IXPs. This led to some inaccuracy in how that data was represented in the IXP tracker, especially visible in the graphs. We've fixed it now and updated how we generate the data each month.
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22 September 2025
For each indicator we track, we always aim to use the most reliable, accessible dataset, with data from as many countries as possible, and to keep those consistent across Pulse. We’ve updated the source we use for country-level domain use in the Pulse Country Reports.
