The Lockdown Effect: Implications of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Internet Traffic

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, many governments imposed lock downs that forced hundreds of millions of citizens to stay at home. The implementation of confinement measures increased Internet traffic demands of residential users, in particular, for remote working, entertainment, commerce, and educatio...

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Hauptverfasser: Feldmann, Anja, Gasser, Oliver, Lichtblau, Franziska, Pujol, Enric, Poese, Ingmar, Dietzel, Christoph, Wagner, Daniel, Wichtlhuber, Matthias, Tapiador, Juan, Vallina-Rodriguez, Narseo, Hohlfeld, Oliver, Smaragdakis, Georgios
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creator Feldmann, Anja
Gasser, Oliver
Lichtblau, Franziska
Pujol, Enric
Poese, Ingmar
Dietzel, Christoph
Wagner, Daniel
Wichtlhuber, Matthias
Tapiador, Juan
Vallina-Rodriguez, Narseo
Hohlfeld, Oliver
Smaragdakis, Georgios
description Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, many governments imposed lock downs that forced hundreds of millions of citizens to stay at home. The implementation of confinement measures increased Internet traffic demands of residential users, in particular, for remote working, entertainment, commerce, and education, which, as a result, caused traffic shifts in the Internet core. In this paper, using data from a diverse set of vantage points (one ISP, three IXPs, and one metropolitan educational network), we examine the effect of these lockdowns on traffic shifts. We find that the traffic volume increased by 15-20% almost within a week--while overall still modest, this constitutes a large increase within this short time period. However, despite this surge, we observe that the Internet infrastructure is able to handle the new volume, as most traffic shifts occur outside of traditional peak hours. When looking directly at the traffic sources, it turns out that, while hypergiants still contribute a significant fraction of traffic, we see (1) a higher increase in traffic of non-hypergiants, and (2) traffic increases in applications that people use when at home, such as Web conferencing, VPN, and gaming. While many networks see increased traffic demands, in particular, those providing services to residential users, academic networks experience major overall decreases. Yet, in these networks, we can observe substantial increases when considering applications associated to remote working and lecturing.
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subjects Computer Science - Computers and Society
Computer Science - Networking and Internet Architecture
Coronaviruses
COVID-19
Education
Internet
Pandemics
Peak hour traffic
Traffic volume
title The Lockdown Effect: Implications of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Internet Traffic
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