Secure Internet servers - Country Ranking - Africa

Definition: The number of distinct, publicly-trusted TLS/SSL certificates found in the Netcraft Secure Server Survey.

Source: Netcraft (http://www.netcraft.com/)

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 South Africa 855,339.00 2020
2 Morocco 16,219.00 2020
3 Nigeria 15,242.00 2020
4 Kenya 12,876.00 2020
5 Seychelles 6,017.00 2020
6 Libya 5,093.00 2020
7 Egypt 4,503.00 2020
8 Tunisia 3,882.00 2020
9 Tanzania 2,281.00 2020
10 Algeria 2,106.00 2020
11 Ghana 1,846.00 2020
12 Uganda 1,573.00 2020
13 Côte d'Ivoire 1,493.00 2020
14 Mauritius 1,158.00 2020
15 Zimbabwe 1,107.00 2020
16 Rwanda 1,061.00 2020
17 Mozambique 918.00 2020
18 Zambia 745.00 2020
19 Angola 660.00 2020
20 Ethiopia 654.00 2020
21 Botswana 620.00 2020
22 Namibia 544.00 2020
23 Cameroon 444.00 2020
24 Senegal 441.00 2020
25 Dem. Rep. Congo 345.00 2020
26 Malawi 324.00 2020
27 Madagascar 286.00 2020
28 Sudan 282.00 2020
29 Benin 226.00 2020
30 Togo 219.00 2020
31 Mali 217.00 2020
32 Lesotho 150.00 2020
33 Eswatini 128.00 2020
34 Burkina Faso 125.00 2020
35 Burundi 103.00 2020
36 Cabo Verde 99.00 2020
37 Gabon 98.00 2020
38 Guinea 89.00 2020
39 Somalia 71.00 2020
40 The Gambia 70.00 2020
41 Mauritania 65.00 2020
42 Sierra Leone 52.00 2020
43 Djibouti 49.00 2020
44 Equatorial Guinea 47.00 2020
45 Congo 46.00 2020
46 Niger 35.00 2020
47 Liberia 31.00 2020
48 Chad 21.00 2020
49 Comoros 8.00 2020
50 São Tomé and Principe 7.00 2020
51 Central African Republic 6.00 2020
51 Guinea-Bissau 6.00 2020
53 Eritrea 3.00 2020

More rankings: Africa | Asia | Central America & the Caribbean | Europe | Middle East | North America | Oceania | South America | World |

Development Relevance: The quality of an economy's infrastructure, including power and communications, is an important element in investment decisions for both domestic and foreign investors. Government effort alone is not enough to meet the need for investments in modern infrastructure; public-private partnerships, especially those involving local providers and financiers, are critical for lowering costs and delivering value for money. In telecommunications, competition in the marketplace, along with sound regulation, is lowering costs, improving quality, and easing access to services around the globe. Today's smartphones and tablets have computer power equivalent to that of yesterday's computers and provide a similar range of functions. Device convergence is thus rendering the conventional definition obsolete. Comparable statistics on access, use, quality, and affordability of ICT are needed to formulate growth-enabling policies for the sector and to monitor and evaluate the sector's impact on development. Although basic access data are available for many countries, in most developing countries little is known about who uses ICT; what they are used for (school, work, business, research, government); and how they affect people and businesses. The global Partnership on Measuring ICT for Development is helping to set standards, harmonize information and communications technology statistics, and build statistical capacity in developing countries. However, despite significant improvements in the developing world, the gap between the ICT haves and have-nots remains. Access to telecommunication services rose on an unprecedented scale over the past two decades. This growth was driven primarily by wireless technologies and liberalization of telecommunications markets, which have enabled faster and less costly network rollout. Mobile communications have a particularly important impact in rural areas. The mobility, ease of use, flexible deployment, and relatively low and declining rollout costs of wireless technologies enable them to reach rural populations with low levels of income and literacy. The next billion mobile subscribers will consist mainly of the rural poor. Access is the key to delivering telecommunications services to people. If the service is not affordable to most people, goals of universal usage will not be met. Over the past decade new financing and technology, along with privatization and market liberalization, have spurred dramatic growth in telecommunications in many countries. With the rapid development of mobile telephony and the global expansion of the Internet, information and communication technologies are increasingly recognized as essential tools of development, contributing to global integration and enhancing public sector effectiveness, efficiency, and transparency.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: The survey examines the use of encrypted transactions through extensive automated exploration, tallying the number of web sites using HTTPS. This analysis relates to those sites found in the survey where the certificate is valid for the hostname, and the certificate has been issued from a publicly-trusted root. The geographical location is derived from the hosting location of the sites using the certificates.

Aggregation method: Sum

Periodicity: Annual