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Slow internet? How COVID-19 is stressing online infrastructure in your country - Monash University
27 Mar 2020 6:00 AM
- Researchers at Monash Business School have created a Global Internet Pressure map that measures the strain COVID-19 is putting on internet infrastructure.
- Pressure on internet infrastructure is being felt in Malaysia, Italy, Iran, Spain and Sweden.
- Australia’s internet pressure is holding
up. Just. But the signs aren’t reassuring.
As COVID-19 and associated self-isolation measures
transform working practices internationally, new data from a commercial
spin-off from Monash University reveals internet infrastructure is being put
under significant pressure as rolling lockdowns begin to bite.
Dr Klaus Ackermann, Associate
Professor Simon Angus, and Associate Professor Paul Raschky, economists at
Monash University and co-founders of KASPR DataHaus, a Melbourne-based
alternative data company, conducted research on how enormous volumes of global
internet activity data can be used to infer human social and economic
behaviour.
As part of KASPR
DataHaus, they have developed
technology that collects and processes, on a daily basis, billions of internet
activity and quality measurements for any location in the world.
The team has produced a Global Internet Pressure map that is publicly available and is being updated
regularly via the KASPR Datahaus website. Users can explore the global
observations in a dashboard, and download the data for specific countries.
Using data from Thursday to
Friday, 13-14 Feb 2020 as a baseline, they were able to observe changes in
internet latency patterns that emerged during Thursday to Friday, 12-13 Mar
2020, as many countries entered major lock-downs on travel, work, and business.
Associate Professor Paul
Raschky explains: “we call this difference measure, between the first days of
the lock-down period, and the baseline period in early February, ‘Internet
Pressure’, since if it is greater than zero, it exposes latency, or speed,
issues, starting to affect millions of internet users across these regions.
“While
the values may seem relatively small, such as 3 per cent or 7 per cent, such a
difference is far from normal, and indicates that many users are probably
experiencing bandwidth congestion. More people at home means more people online
– with big bandwidth appetites.
“The situation is not
dissimilar to a family trying to make their way through a crowded subway
tunnel. Your streaming video or video upload during teleconferencing is made up
of thousands of small packets of information; these packets need to find their
way down copper and fibre-optic cables across vast distances. The more
streaming packets trying to make the journey at once, the more congested the
pathway, and the slower the arrival time.”
By focusing on regions within
countries having at least 100 confirmed COVID-19 cases as of Friday 13 March,
the researchers were able to examine how well each nation’s internet was
performing given the rapid escalation in home-based entertainment,
video-conferencing, and communication taking place online.
Their findings give a
fascinating look into what is now a global reality.
“In most OECD countries
affected by COVID-19, the internet quality is still relatively stable. Although
regions throughout Italy, Spain and somewhat surprisingly, Sweden, are showing
signs of strain,” Dr Raschky said.
“However, it is clear there
are some huge issues with the internet in Iran, in which the median (or middle)
region in our sample is showing slowing of 25 per cent. In real terms, this
will be having major impacts on the user experience.
“Considering the Iranian
Government’s history of tampering with the country’s internet by intentionally
slowing it, there is a possibility that this increase in internet pressure is
the result of the regime’s effort to contain the spread of (mis-)information
about the situation around COVID-19.”
At the time of the study,
researchers say Malaysia appeared as something of an anomaly. Despite having a
relatively small number of confirmed cases on 13 March, the day they accessed
the latest figures, the country’s internet pressure readings were far more
outsized, sitting above China, Italy, South Korea, Spain and Japan – all
countries with confirmed caseloads several times larger.
“Sadly, recent news reports,
released a few days after our study was published, seem to confirm the
indications we were seeing in our internet pressure measurement,” Dr Raschky
said.
“It has now been revealed
there was a 16,000-people religious gathering in Malaysia. Following this event,
reports emerged that there have been reports of thousands of participants
showing flu-like symptoms.
“As a result, it is possible
that an unusually large number of Malaysians have probably been staying at home
for the past week. We saw this in our observations before the Malaysian
Government acknowledged the problem and enacted severe lockdowns.”
And what of Australia? Given
the sudden shift to online learning and work-from-home happening across
Australia’s major cities, the team has so far found that Australia’s internet
is holding up. Just.
Of the states, the ACT, South
Australia and Victoria are showing initial signs of pressure, even though
schools remain largely open, and many workers continue to go into work.
“The signs for now in
Australia are ‘steady’, but not entirely reassuring,” Dr Raschky said.
“We will keep monitoring the
situation and plan to provide further reports as the Australian social
distancing measures ramp up in the coming days.”
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