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Demographics of Hacker News by country

toolhub.tech

51 points by sine_break 3 years ago · 77 comments

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tpmx 3 years ago

Percentage of visitors relative to each country's population, top 20

  Switzerland     2.30
  Sweden          1.73
  Ireland         1.63
  Denmark         1.55
  Norway          1.48
  Netherlands     1.43
  Canada          1.26
  Finland         1.25
  United Kingdom  1.25
  United States   1.24
  Singapore       1.23
  Australia       1.13
  Austria         1.01
  Slovenia        0.95
  Lithuania       0.79
  Croatia         0.73
  Germany         0.70
  Portugal        0.68
  Israel          0.53
  Hong Kong       0.53
Via OCR/manual proofing/chatgpt population lookup/spreadsheet calculation.

I didn't include countries that had less than 0.2% of the visitors because of the error margin caused by the low number of significant digits. Iceland at 0.1% and a population of 370k, for example...

yreg 3 years ago

>The data suggests that the majority of users come from the United States

41.2% is not the majority…

Interesting data though, thanks for it. At what UTC time range was the Google Shutdown post at the top of the board?

quickthrower2 3 years ago

Weighting countries by 1/population would be interesting and maybe more useful to see the demographic.

Or to put it another way if euro becomes one country and US splits into states the stats look a lot different but the same people are using HN all the same.

  • w-m 3 years ago

    Adding up the percentages from the graph, roughly 25% of clicks came from continental Europe.

shenman 3 years ago

Would be interesting to see the visitors by country (per capita) version too.

Brajeshwar 3 years ago

I felt that this is more in general trend with most websites, especially with visits from India. Despite being one of the most populous country with "high internet penetration", Indians usually don't seem to visit websites.

I know the post's is the data is from HackerNews visitors over a certain period of time -- when it was working time across USA's timezone.

Even on my own personal website (I'm Indian), India is like the 4th highest visitor with a hugh margin of difference from USA's visit. It, however, does catches up with USA to my family website though the difference still remains high with the top visitors - USA.

samsaga2 3 years ago

It would be nice to divide the total users by the country population to see the hacker news impact per country.

taspeotis 3 years ago

No mention of time zones when their post hit the front page…

  • spacebanana7 3 years ago

    Yeah that could make a huge difference. Doubt there’d be many nighttime readers from the US

bilqis 3 years ago

I would expect that a lot of people didn’t click on that article because of clickbaity buzzfeed-style name.

esalman 3 years ago

Funnily enough, my HN account is 12 years old and back then I was located in Bangladesh with no concrete plan to come to the US. The US-centric nature of HN (or Reddit, 8yr old account) never bothered me, rather it gave more context to those post/comment tones.

diimdeep 3 years ago

You should filter out IP of VPN and hosting providers(VPS) https://github.com/X4BNet/lists_vpn/ and then account for day/night cycle around the world.

dijit 3 years ago

Would be interesting to use this post's analytics as a check against that data ;)

  • anenefan 3 years ago

    Yes it would wouldn't it. :D I can imagine a slightly different representation for this thread Vs one where many couldn't care less if google is being google once more.

jirpoltlaw 3 years ago

Cyprus, represent! More of a lurker around here, as evident by my karma. I'll be honest, I did not expect my country to even appear. Pretty cool.

distcs 3 years ago

Interesting to see UK and Germany taking the 2nd and 3rd spots. Is there any easy explanation for why UK and Germany are at the next two spots? Is UK the next hotspot for IT after US? Is Germany too? What about China and India? Does it not have more IT crowd than UK or Germany? Or most of them don't visit HN? Interested in understanding these trends better.

  • lordnacho 3 years ago

    I suspect HNers in China use VPN?

    UK and Germany are also hotspots for startups, with large English speaking IT populations.

  • mekster 3 years ago

    What amount of Chinese users frequent English sites? Do they have Chinese equivalent of HN?

    Also I wonder how many percentage of Chinese are capable of sufficiently understanding English to frequent English sites.

8bitsrule 3 years ago

Interesting that Singapore topped most of SE Asia. Gotta wonder what the spread's like across 1000 posts.

  • mekster 3 years ago

    Sounds natural as they use English as a native language.

    I doubt Asian people are as fluent in English as European people.

    Possibly certain amount of numbers from those countries are native speakers living there.

miyuru 3 years ago

My country is not even mentioned, and I am pretty sure I opened that post. (My country is situated just below India)

amadeuspagel 3 years ago

There's also a poll: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30210378

nehal3m 3 years ago

I don't like that France's color in the chart is more orange than the Netherlands'.

Come on fellow Dutchies, we gotta move up one spot!

sylware 3 years ago

Should be supplemented with a per capita weighted graph.

Yeah, this is a tantrum... sorry...

I cannot wait to have IPv6/IPv4 HN access stats too... :P

oefnak 3 years ago

Would be interesting to see that list compensated for the number inhabitants per country.

neallindsay 3 years ago

It's weird how many tools treat Puerto Rico as if it's not part of the U.S.

inSenCite 3 years ago

Gonna have to sample more than just 1 post I think

LoveMortuus 3 years ago

I wonder if the demographics are skewed due to Google being a US company, and thus perhaps people that aren't from there show less interest in the topic.

terhechte 3 years ago

I asked GTP-4 to recalculate the data based on the population of the countries:

I did the sorting in Apple Numbers and somehow it botched the percentages. E.g. Iceland (291%) is actually 0.291% but I have no idea how to fix that. And I have to leave now. Sorry.

---

Iceland 291 %

Switzerland 229 %

Malta 200 %

Sweden 174 %

Ireland 168 %

Luxembourg 160 %

Denmark 156 %

New Zealand 156 %

Norway 153 %

Estonia 151 %

Netherlands 146 %

Finland 127 %

Canada 126 %

United States 124 %

United Kingdom 124 %

Singapore 120 %

Australia 112 %

Germany 101 %

Austria 101 %

Slovenia 97 %

Cyprus 83 %

Croatia 74 %

Lithuania 71 %

Portugal 67 %

Israel 58 %

Hong Kong 54 %

Latvia 54 %

Belgium 52 %

Czechia 47 %

Bulgaria 42 %

France 40 %

Poland 40 %

Slovakia 37 %

Armenia 33 %

Hungary 31 %

Spain 30 %

Puerto Rico 29 %

Serbia 28 %

Greece 27 %

Bosnia & Herzegovina 26 %

Georgia 26 %

Italy 22 %

Romania 21 %

Taiwan 13 %

Belarus 11 %

United Arab Emirates 10 %

Japan 8 %

Russia 7 %

South Africa 7 %

Argentina 7 %

Ukraine 7 %

Malaysia 7 %

Brazil 6 %

Turkey 6 %

South Korea 6 %

Ecuador 6 %

Chile 5 %

Kazakhstan 5 %

Colombia 4 %

Thailand 3 %

Saudi Arabia 3 %

India 2 %

Indonesia 2 %

Mexico 2 %

Vietnam 2 %

Kenya 2 %

Philippines 1 %

Egypt 1 %

Pakistan 1 %

China 0 %

Nigeria 0 %

  • tpmx 3 years ago

    It got at least NZ very wrong.

    • mekster 3 years ago

      I'm afraid people are going to start posting information from all the AI tools without human checks for accuracy and pretend they're useful in discussions.

jagrsw 3 years ago

An obligatory reminder, esp. for US-based folks, that when creating posts/comments when writing things like 'our country', 'the president', 'here', 'in the parliament', 'the law says', 'everybody here knows', and not specifying geographical details, you're somewhat confusing and potentially irritating ~60% of HN community.

  • rockbruno 3 years ago

    I always found this interesting because this phenomenon exists all over the internet (there's even a dedicated subreddit for it: /r/usdefaultism). If you don't make it extremely clear where you're from, for some reason the internet just assumes you're american.

    • umanwizard 3 years ago

      > this phenomenon exists all over the internet

      No, it exists all over the parts of the internet that are run by US companies, hosted in the US, and primarily popular with Americans. Nobody is going to assume you’re American on Jeuxvideo.com.

    • LeanderK 3 years ago

      I bet that a factor is that, while not the majority, it's the largest group

  • lordnacho 3 years ago

    It's quite an interesting defaultism though, it gives us some insight into what people think.

    There's this strange asymmetry: ask a non-American to name a US Supreme Court justice, a famous American businessman, an entertainer, a politician, and maybe some other categories that I haven't listed. We all know one, even though it might actually be hard to name the same for neighboring countries like Ireland or France.

    Ask someone if they know the subdivisions of the USA, and if they know the subdivisions of their own neighbors. Do I know the mayor of anywhere in Ireland or France? I know the mayor of San Francisco.

    The culture of what country is in the cinema, or the radio? Everywhere you go, it's the US, plus a little bit of the local. Check the top-10 lists of any country in Europe to see what I mean.

    It's so strangely dominating.

    • viridian 3 years ago

      Well put. Lines up with my comment ITT and my observations on the American side of things as well. There's a strange dynamic where a massive amount of people across the world have some cursory knowledge about the state I live in, whereas vice-versa I'd probably have to look up if their country even has states, provinces, districts, counties or what have you.

    • hammyhavoc 3 years ago

      I'm a Brit and still describe pricing when discussing online as USD because that's seemingly the "currency of the internet" that everybody seems to understand the value of.

  • TonyTrapp 3 years ago

    In similar vein: Using two-letter abbreviations for US states that might as well be mistaken for two-letter country codes. For a long time I assumed people talking about CA were referring to Canada...

  • viridian 3 years ago

    I used to be bothered by people assuming America as a default, but I've actually changed my opinion on this after doing an online political science course through the University of Nottingham.

    The thing I found shocking while attending this course, was that even in a UK university, America was still the most frequent subject of discussion and reference, with the UK playing second fiddle. And then I would read comments as a part of the course from other places in the anglosphere where for instance, they are asked to name the first things that come to mind when they think of 'banal nationalism' and you read things like America's heavy use of bald eagle imagery, the American pledge of allegiance at sporting events, etc.

    I've decided that since it seems nearly universal that English speaking countries give America primacy (even in the context of a non-American university focusing on a heavily European oriented subject), that there's no point fighting it. America's cultural hegemony has complete dominance over the English language.

  • Tade0 3 years ago

    Personally I'm 100% fine with this. US-based company hosting this forum - US quirks (and features).

    I only take issue with extrapolating US-specific things to the rest of the world. Case in point: I don't agree with around half of the statements on HN that explain something as "human nature" when in fact it's something that usually just the Americans say or do.

  • belter 3 years ago

    Also don't assume all users are on the same planet or speak English as native language.

    • bestouff 3 years ago

      Indeed, as a French I find many Americans are lacking basic English skills.

      /s

      • umanwizard 3 years ago

        Ironically enough, your post is wrong English. You can’t use “French” as a noun in English. Nobody would say “as a French” rather than “as a Frenchman” or “as a French person”.

  • hammyhavoc 3 years ago

    But US-based website of a US-based company, right?

    I'm a Brit, so yes, the defaultism rankles, but at this point I've just learned to accept that people write from their own perspective and to not accept that is pedantry.

  • umanwizard 3 years ago

    I try to avoid doing that, but come on, you can just choose not to be irritated by something so minor.

    (Somewhat off-topic, but in case anyone cares: we in the US call it the Congress, not parliament.)

    • Waterluvian 3 years ago

      If America has taught me anything, it’s that I absolutely can choose to be irritated by something so minor. ;)

    • yreg 3 years ago

      +1 for being a bit irritated when I read claims about laws and regulations without any specification of the geographic place they apply to. It happens more on reddit than over here.

  • nanna 3 years ago

    Likewise when you use the word 'awesome'.

  • rapsey 3 years ago

    Not really. Unless specified the poster being US based is kind of assumed.

    • KyeRussell 3 years ago

      How is anyone meant to respond to this? You’re asserting it as some sort of irrefutable fact. It’s not. It’s how you’re choosing to operate. I for one find this assumption frustrating on an almost daily basis. I think less of people that do it.

    • h4ch1 3 years ago

      What would make you say that? IMO that's a potentially harmful assumption, I agree the demographics point to that but doesn't help when this isn't a real-time chat where things like these can be cleared up quickly

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