Rest of World turned to W3Techs, a web-scanning firm based in Austria, to count all of the publicly accessible web addresses on the internet to get hard numbers on the discrepancy. Our data shows that a little more than half the sites on the web use English as their primary language. That’s a lot more than one might expect, given that native English speakers only make up just under 5% of the global population. Meanwhile, Chinese and Hindi are the second and third most-spoken languages in the world, but the same scan found they account for just 1.4% and 0.07% of domains, respectively.
- Most of the Chinese internet is on a handful of very large websites. Same thing probably applies to other languages.
- Every single non-ASCII domain name is a phishing site, no exceptions.
Is be interested in a comparison that includes more people than just “primary language” speakers, because most Chinese and English speakers don’t use those languages as their primary language. Most Europeans, for example, can speak English even though their primary language is their native language.
I’m very surprised Russian is 2nd.
I’ve felt after learning this sort of thing, that no matter what bad may have happened, the world owes the British Empire a great debt of gratitude for spreading the language globally.
Without a global empire spreading a single language to every corner of the world, pretty much all the modern tools of communication would still be much more limited because we’d be a bunch of little enclaves of various languages instead of having a commonly understood one to communicate with.
I wouldn’t say great debt of gratitude; it reduces the score.
Test