That statistic appears to be a simple estimate of the number of speakers for a given language times the % of internet penetration in a given population (summed over all distinct populations speaking the same language).

For languages spoken mostly in reasonably developed countries this approaches the population figures.

But it is a reasonable estimate for the purpose: except for the effect of trade languages and second languages, 100% penetration is something of a cap, so that the long-term (or not so long-term) development will see the internet use of languages match other use of languages.

As of the most recent statistics (see wikipedia for sources), the declared or detected content language of about half of all pages was still English. Or, in other words, only half. One would expect that to gravitate to the same distribution as observed for other media, such as print publications: not all languages will have perfectly similar rates of content production, but the current large fraction of English content is bound to shrink.

In this context, it is notable that the UTF-8 inflection point is long behind us: it was a few years ago that 50% of all pages counted were detected as UTF-8. By now that encoding dominates. For UASG that means that the fraction of pages that could not accommodate a URL with an IDN (or could not accommodate an arbitrary IDN) has shrunk to insignificant proportions already and that the bottlenecks are elsewhere.

A./

On 2/25/2019 11:20 PM, Dr. Ajaay Data wrote:
Hello Mark

Hope this will give you some information..

According to internetworldstats, total internet users (by language) for English is 25.4% https://www.internetworldstats.com/stats7.htm

Thanks.

Ajay

On February 26, 2019 9:40:56 AM GMT+05:30, "Mark W. Datysgeld" <mark@governanceprimer.com> wrote:
Don,

a question that I literally get asked every engagement I attend concerns what is the breakdown of script usage on the Web. People want to understand how much dissemination there is of different languages around the world, and this helps them better understand the actual extent of the diversity, which is usually not clear at all in their heads. While this is not strictly DNS-related, it certainly is something that helps getting people on board with the idea that the worlds is vast and diverse to the extreme, which make projects such as UA necessary.

Regards,

On Mon, 25 Feb 2019 23:59:16 +0000
Don Hollander <don.hollander@icann.org> wrote:
We have this FAQ published at https://uasg.tech/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/UASG011-160823-en-faq-digital.pdf I'd very much welcome comments from the community about this - whether you think it's fine as it is or whether things have progressed since we last updated this in 2016 or whether there are fresh questions that should be included. If you need a deadline, let's aim for the 5th of March. Don Don Hollander Secretary General - UASG Skype: Don_Hollander
-- Mark W. Datysgeld from Governance Primer [www.markwd.website] Representing businesses in IG together with AR-TARC and ABES

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