On the Centralization and Regionalization of the Web
Over the past decade, Internet centralization and its implications for both people and the resilience of the Internet has become a topic of active debate. While the networking community informally agrees on the definition of centralization, we lack a formal metric for quantifying centralization, whi...
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Zusammenfassung: | Over the past decade, Internet centralization and its implications for both
people and the resilience of the Internet has become a topic of active debate.
While the networking community informally agrees on the definition of
centralization, we lack a formal metric for quantifying centralization, which
limits research beyond descriptive analysis. In this work, we introduce a
statistical measure for Internet centralization, which we use to better
understand how the web is centralized across four layers of web infrastructure
(hosting providers, DNS infrastructure, TLDs, and certificate authorities) in
150~countries. Our work uncovers significant geographical variation, as well as
a complex interplay between centralization and sociopolitically driven
regionalization. We hope that our work can serve as the foundation for more
nuanced analysis to inform this important debate. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2406.19569 |