Seven Days in a Busy Week On the Internet
Today, video on the internet has prime time, aka time when the number of video viewers jumps up. The existence of prime time internet seems to be starting to replace TV.
According to the latest world internet traffic study from Cisco, the time when the world's most people use the internet is at 9 to 11 pm. Most people online when it's time to watch videos,
One interesting thing is the internet busy hour is beginning to tangle with prime time TV broadcast time. According to Senior Analyst, Visual Networking Index, Cisco, Arielle Sumits, at first, the second busiest period of the internet is at 11 pm to 1 am. Now, the second busiest period of the internet shifts to 7 to 9 pm, a period known as prime time to watch TV.
Sumits said Cisco did not have data that could explain why internet peak hour starts to be equal to prime time TV time. However, he explains, video-on-demand services (VOD) such as Netflix is starting to become an alternative to watching TV.
"We do not know if people watched TV early, usually people watch news content on TV and watch entertainment content on VOD service," Sumits said. "But, VOD service is one of the reasons why prime time internet is becoming faster."
- Ever imagined what happens on the internet in a minute? Many! The 60 second count is the time at which there are many events going on, including on the internet.
A pretty @busy day for internet. After the news that made the system administrators guns to sleep for patching system because there is "Dirty COW" categorized as critical kernel flaw, overnight also some big sites / service providers such as Twitter, Reddit, Spotify, New York Times and PayPal uprooted because denial of service (DDoS) attack against Dyn (one of the largest domain name servers). - After long-awaited, Facebook @CEO and founder Mark Zuckerberg finally appeared to respond to a data leak scandal about 50 million Facebook users who make a scene. He admitted his company made a mistake and promised to take firm steps to limit developers accessing such information.
"We have a responsibility to protect your data and if we can not do it, then we are not worthy of serving you," he wrote on his official Facebook account.
BUSY-ORG
Zuck said the UK-based Cambridge Analytica company, which allegedly used the data for the benefit of Donald Trump's campaign had been banned from Facebook. Facebook is also working with regulators to conduct investigations related to this issue.