Each quarter, Akamai will be publishing a quarterly "State of the Internet" report. This report will include data gathered across Akamai's global server network about attack traffic and broadband adoption, as well as trends seen in this data over time. It will also aggregate publicly available news and information about notable events seen throughout the quarter, including Denial of Service attacks, Web site hacks and network events, including outages and new connections.

During the third quarter of 2008, Akamai observed attack traffic originating from 179 unique countries around the world. China and the United States were the two largest attack traffic sources, accounting for over 45% of observed traffic in total. Akamai observed attack traffic targeted at nearly 2,400 unique ports, with the top 10 ports seeing over 85% of the observed attack traffic. Web site and Internet security were regularly in the news during the quarter, as several proof-of-concept attack vectors were announced, targeting social networking Web sites, as well as DNS, BGP and TCP, all core underlying Internet protocols.

Hurricanes Gustav and Ike, which made landfall in the United States in September, caused Internet outages in the states that they swept through. Notable Web site outages in the third quarter were attributed to increased traffic, human error and power outages.

Global connectivity saw big advances in the third quarter, with various undersea cable projects getting underway or nearing completion, the commercial launch of WiMAX services in a number of countries, and the announcement of fiber-to-the-premises services that will bring gigabit-speed connections to subscribers in Japan, the Ukraine and the Netherlands.

Akamai observed a nearly ten percent increase globally in the number of unique IP addresses connecting to Akamai's network, and this increase may be attributable to more people turning to the World Wide Web for news and video content related to the Beijing Olympic Games, which took place in August. From a global connection speed perspective, South Korea had the highest levels of "high broadband" (>5 Mbps) connectivity for the third straight quarter. In the United States, Delaware also maintained its top position, with 55% of connections to Akamai occurring at 5 Mbps or greater. Looking at observed "narrowband" (<256 Kbps) connections, Mayotte and Equatorial Guinea were the "slowest" countries, with 97% and 94% of connections to Akamai, respectively, occurring at speeds below 256 Kbps. In the United States, the District of Columbia and Washington State continued to have the highest percentages of observed connections below 256 Kbps. However, these regions also saw a significant quarter-over-quarter decline in narrowband connection percentages, down 25% and 46% respectively as compared to the second quarter.