Enabling Technologies
New technologies are essential to enable the Internet to keep growing, evolving and meeting the changing expectations of users. Enabling technologies contribute to improved Internet scalability, security, trust and availability.
Internet Society Pulse curates information about levels of IPv6 adoption in countries and networks around the world, progress being made towards an encrypted web, indicators of DNSSEC adoption by the registries for country-code domain names, and data on worldwide adoption of TLS1.3 and HTTP/3.
HTTPS
96%
Current percentage of top 1000 websites globally that support HTTPS.
IPv6
47%
Current percentage of top 1000 websites globally that support IPv6.
TLS1.3
84%
Current percentage of top 1000 websites globally that support TLS 1.3.
The geographic boundaries and country names shown on this site do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Internet Society concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area of its authorities. Dotted and dashed lines on maps represent approximate border lines for which there may not yet be full agreement. We use ISO 3166 country codes and names. We show boundaries as indicated by the UN Geospatial Network.
Region Data
Region | HTTPS | IPv6 | DNSSEC |
---|---|---|---|
Africa | 76% | No data | 49% |
Oceania | 81% | No data | 57% |
Americas | 83% | No data | 65% |
Asia | 78% | No data | 69% |
Europe | 90% | No data | 86% |
Sub-Region Data
Region | HTTPS | IPv6 | DNSSEC |
---|---|---|---|
South America | 72% | No data | 81% |
Western Africa | 75% | No data | 47% |
Central America | 79% | No data | 50% |
Eastern Africa | 72% | No data | 59% |
Northern Africa | 76% | No data | 67% |
Middle Africa | 80% | No data | 0% |
Southern Africa | 86% | No data | 80% |
Northern America | 97% | No data | 100% |
Caribbean | 89% | No data | 52% |
Eastern Asia | 78% | No data | 75% |
Southern Asia | 69% | No data | 67% |
South-eastern Asia | 75% | No data | 91% |
Southern Europe | 88% | No data | 62% |
Australia and New Zealand | 96% | No data | 83% |
Melanesia | 61% | No data | 80% |
Micronesia | 95% | No data | 43% |
Polynesia | 97% | No data | 40% |
Central Asia | 75% | No data | 80% |
Western Asia | 84% | No data | 50% |
Eastern Europe | 84% | No data | 100% |
Northern Europe | 95% | No data | 94% |
Western Europe | 91% | No data | 100% |
Global Growth of Enabling Technologies
The charts below show the global growth of key enabling technologies – TLS1.3, HTTP/3, IPv6 and DNSSEC – over time using the latest information from our data partners.
TLS1.3
Many popular Internet applications like e-mail and web browsers use Transport Layer Security (TLS) to secure traffic against eavesdropping and against data being tampered with while in transit between clients and servers. Over time, flaws in early versions of TLS have been identified leading to substantial improvements to the protocol.
The latest version, TLS 1.3, provides enhanced security and fewer ways for attackers to find new flaws. TLS 1.3 has also been shown to improve performance, with secure connections taking less time to be established. This helps to demonstrate that optimizations can be made without compromising on security. Improving the security of Internet applications of all kinds is imperative for a healthy and growing Internet.
TLS Version adoption (data source: Mozilla Firefox Telemetry)
HTTP/3
Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) is a fundamental part of the World Wide Web. In addition to powering the web, HTTP is increasingly used to transfer data between Internet-connected devices of all kinds. The latest version of HTTP (HTTP/3) marks quite a radical departure from the past by adopting a completely new transport protocol (QUIC).
The ability for the Internet to embrace HTTP/3 indicates the Internet’s capacity to keep evolving and supporting new applications. As the Internet has matured, deploying new protocols to improve performance and/or security can be difficult. The introduction of a new transport protocol for something as popular and important as HTTP is a real test of the capacity of today’s Internet to continue to support growth and innovation.
HTTP/3 Adoption (data source: Mozilla Firefox Telemetry)
IPv6
IPv6 is the latest version of the fundamental technology (Internet Protocol) that powers the Internet. The previous version, IPv4, is still in operation on many networks around the world but it can only support an Internet of a few billion devices. By contrast, IPv6 can support an Internet of billions of billions of devices and can provide enough address space to meet the needs of the growing Internet for decades to come. Simply put, the Internet has outgrown its original design and IPv6 is the solution.
Internet Society Pulse presents measurements of IPv6 adoption to raise awareness of the different levels of IPv6 adoption in different countries and networks around the globe, and to encourage greater adoption of this important enabling technology.