Internet Resilience

The Internet plays a critical role in society today and the COVID-19 pandemic further underlined the importance of reliable Internet connectivity for everyone. Unfortunately, not all countries have reliable Internet infrastructure. Low-income countries often have under-provisioned networks and lack robust cable infrastructure and redundant interconnection systems. In these countries or regions, the likelihood of Internet outages occurring is much higher than elsewhere.

resilient Internet connection is one that maintains an acceptable level of service in the face of faults and challenges to normal operation. In this Pulse focus area we track resiliency metrics using the Internet Resilience Index to help support the development of policies and infrastructure to improve Internet resilience at the local, regional, and global level.

Our overall measure of Internet resilience is based on the following pillars:

Infrastructure

The existence and availability of physical infrastructure that provides Internet connectivity.

Performance

The ability of the network to provide end-users with seamless and reliable access to Internet services.

Security

The ability of the network to resist intentional or unintentional disruptions through the adoption of security technologies and best practices.

Market Readiness

The ability of the market to self-regulate and provide affordable prices to end-users by maintaining a diverse and competitive market.

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Burundi

Infrastructure19%Cable ecosystem26%Fibre 10km reach26%Mobile connectivity5%Network coverage3%Spectrum allocation9%Enabling infrastructure24%Data centers3%Number of IXPs45%Performance16%Fixed networks8%Fixed download2%Fixed jitter0%Fixed latency31%Fixed upload5%Mobile networks20%Mobile download4%Mobile jitter0%Mobile latency61%Mobile upload23%Security26%Enabling technologies7%Secure web traffic10%IPv6 adoption0%Domain name system security13%DNSSEC adoption0%DNSSEC validation27%Routing hygiene46%MANRS44%Upstream redundancy47%Security threat36%DDoS protection100%Global cybersecurity2%Secure Internet servers18%Market readiness33%Market structure18%Affordability0%Upstream provider diversity53%Market diversity6%Traffic localization48%Domain count0%EGDI27%Peering efficiency100%

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.

Regions and Sub-Regions are taken from the UN standard regions data.