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World’s Worst Internet Clampdown Cost Myanmar $3 Billion in 2021

Internet outages by Myanmar’s military junta to curb nationwide protests over a coup in 2021 cost the country $2.8 billion.

World’s Worst Internet Clampdown Cost Myanmar $3 Billion in 2021
Demonstrators hold up images of Aung San Suu Kyi during a protest outside the Embassy of Myanmar in Bangkok. (Photographer: Andre Malerba/Bloomberg)

Internet outages by Myanmar’s military junta to curb nationwide protests over a coup in 2021 cost the country $2.8 billion, the biggest losses in the world, according to a study.

The Southeast Asian nation topped 21 countries that disrupted the internet for a total 30,179 hours last year, leading to global losses of $5.5 billion -- up 36% from 2020. Nigeria and India followed Myanmar, a report from U.K.-based digital privacy and security research group Top10VPN showed Tuesday. 

Nigeria lost $1.5 billion in 2021 and India, the world’s biggest democracy that had topped the list in 2020, lost $583 million. Governments controlled the flow of information by total internet blackouts and social media blocks, or by throttling speeds to levels where anything beyond simple text-based communication becomes impossible. 

World’s Worst Internet Clampdown Cost Myanmar $3 Billion in 2021

Twitter was the most blocked social media platform with a total 12,379 hours of outages, followed by Facebook, WhatsApp, Instagram and YouTube, according to the report. 

Based on tools developed by Netblocks and advocacy groups The Internet Society and The Collaboration on International ICT Policy in East and Southern Africa, the report calculates losses using indicators from the World Bank, The International Telecommunication Union, Eurostat and the U.S. Census.

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.