dbo:abstract
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- In der Türkei nutzten 2016 etwa 58 % der Bevölkerung das Internet, was über dem weltweiten Durchschnitt von 51,7 % liegt. Die Top-Level-Domain der Türkei ist .tr. (de)
- The Internet in Turkey has been available to the public since 1993, although experimentation at Ege University started in 1987. The first available connections were dial-up. Cable Internet has been available since 1998 and ADSL since 2001. Currently Türk Telekom's TTNET ADSL2+ service is the most widely used Internet service in Turkey, offering speeds from 8 Mbit/s to 24 Mbit/s. TTNET offers VDSL2 service with speeds at 25 Mbit/s to 100 Mbit/s as well. Alternative broadband companies, while mostly still using TTNET infrastructure, such as and TurkNet are also available. is offering fibre broadband in limited areas in 19 cities, though the company is enlarging at a healthy pace. They currently offer up to 1000 Mbit/s speeds. Furthermore, relatively wide but not universal coverage of cable Internet is maintained by , offering speeds from 10 Mbit/s to 100 Mbit/s. TTNET's monopoly and perceived excessive pricing have received numerous criticisms from users over the years. According to TÜSİAD, Turkey has 36 million active Internet users with 10 million active e-commerce users. The penetration and the usage of credit cards are very high in Turkey. However development of alternative payment systems will be helpful both by facilitating the shopping of the consumers owning credit cards and by familiarizing non-credit card holders with the e-commerce. In 2019 it was reported that the Internet users of Turkey had reached to 69,107,183 (12th highest number of internet users worldwide) - amounting to 88% of Turkish households having internet access. Wi-Fi in Turkey is free in all areas and easily accessible to all the citizens. Hotels, hostel, railway stations, airports have free access to internet and Wi-Fi. Turkey implements protectionist policies to stimulate the local internet technology industry and enforce data retention: In 2016 payment gateway PayPal was forced to cease most of its operations in the country. In January 2017 the government unveiled plans to build a domestic web search engine and webmail service. Internet Entrepreneurship in Turkey, also called "Digital Bosphorus" has reached several exits in last years. The biggest three of them have been Yemeksepeti, Gittigidiyor and Markafoni. According to Sina Afra, the potential of the Turkish Internet market is bigger than in many other European countries. Internet in Turkey holds a 'Not Free' ranking in Freedom House's index. Turkish government has constantly blocked websites like Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and as of May 2017, Wikipedia was inaccessible According to Twitter's transparency report, Turkey leads in social media censorship. till 15 January 2020; Wikipedia opened to access after the Constitutional Court of Turkey ruled that the block of Wikipedia violated human rights and ordered it to be lifted on 26 December 2019. (en)
- Internet en Turquie est utilisé en 2019 par environ 74 % de la population après une croissance extrêmement rapide depuis le début du XXIe siècle. L'état des infrastructures fait que les connexions domestiques sont plus rares que celles utilisant les accès professionnels ou les cybercafés. Les fournisseurs d'accès sont peu nombreux et les tarifs élevés. L'Internet en Turquie est fermement réglementé et fait l'objet d'une censure à des fins politiques. Le domaine de premier niveau de la Turquie est « .tr ». (fr)
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