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October 1, 2009 9:17 AM PDT

'State of the Internet' assessed

by Lance Whitney
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Internet attacks came from 201 different countries in the second quarter, up from 68 countries in the first quarter, according to a report released Thursday.

Akamai Technologies' quarterly "State of the Internet" report compiles data about the online world, from Internet attacks to average connection speeds across the globe.

Among the 201 countries now seen as the source of malware and other Internet threats, the U.S., China, and South Korea accounted for more than half of the attacks in the second quarter.

(Credit: Akamai)

Blaming the Conficker worm on the majority of the assaults, Akamai discovered attacks on 4,100 unique ports, with 10 specific ports hit in about 90 percent of the cases. One specific port, 445, used for Microsoft Directory Services, has proven especially vulnerable and was compromised in 68 percent of the attacks, allowing hackers to invade computers with this port open, Akamai said.

The report also examined connection speeds.

Several countries saw their connection speeds drop from the previous quarter, with the overall global average falling 11 percent to 1.5Mbps. Only 19 percent of the connections throughout the globe managed speeds greater than 5Mbps, a slight decline from the prior quarter.

(Credit: Akamai)

Among all countries, South Korea came in first place with an average speed of 11Mbps, while Eritrea was last at 42Kbps. The U.S. was 18th on the global list, reaching average connection speeds of 4.2Mbps.

Akamai found that within the U.S., many states also saw connection speeds fall. Arizona's average speed dropped 27 percent from the first quarter. New Hampshire enjoyed the fastest connection in the country at 6.4Mbps, while Delaware fell to second place at 6.3Mbps, down from 7.2Mbps in the prior quarter. Overall, the East Coast led the nation with the fastest speeds of any region.

(Credit: Akamai)

Akamai caches Internet content for its customers, allowing it to monitor traffic through the Net. The company uses the data from its Internet monitoring to compile its quarterly reports.

Lance Whitney wears a few different technology hats--journalist, Web developer, and software trainer. He's a contributing editor for Microsoft TechNet Magazine and writes for other computer publications and Web sites. You can follow Lance on Twitter at @lancewhit. Lance is a member of the CNET Blog Network, and he is not an employee of CNET.
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by mrleon538 October 1, 2009 9:55 AM PDT
I live in NE PA and I get at least 12 Mbps
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by n3td3v October 1, 2009 10:22 AM PDT
This is misleading, the only reason China is top is it has the most internet users in the world by a long margin, not because they are less secure than any other nation.
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by The_happy_switcher October 1, 2009 10:25 AM PDT
Most of these worm, virus attacks would go away if we just banned Windows pcs from the internet once and for all.
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by renGek October 1, 2009 11:17 AM PDT
No how bout we don't allow dumb users to ever touch a computer. Never had a virus in my life and I have owned more than 20 PCs in my life time. PCs are for the professionals. All the fools should just default to macs. Its where they belong.
by bridge solution October 1, 2009 3:31 PM PDT
if all fools default to mac, then mac becomes a highly attractive target to malware.
in the meantime, a lot of green jobs could be crated getting the usa caught up with >>latvia<<<
for connectivity. then maybe set a 5 year plan to catch up with roumania.
must be all those skinny gymnasts able to string cable. ..or perhaps the shortage of phat ceos.
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by Michichael October 2, 2009 9:05 AM PDT
Funny. Akami is one of those stealth scripts that run on websites without you knowing they're there, tracking you. Kinda like google syndicate. Noscript ban both of them. >:)
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by istopdeath November 5, 2009 1:18 PM PST
Google Search: internet coup

The proof that you understand the intent behind of the results of this search is that you will offer to help out.

also Google relevant is: gLoOoVgElSe.html
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