2013 has been a bumper year for the SSL industry, according to the January 2014 Web Server Survey.
Regarding the Web Server market, 2013 were very richer
in twists.
Connectikpeople.co observes that, in the January 2014 survey netcraft.com
received responses from 861,379,152
sites, an increase of 355,935 since last month. Open-source web server nginx
has continued to gain acceptance, especially amongst the busiest web sites.
Nginx is now used on 14% of all web sites found, up 2 percentage points since
January 2013, but has fallen slightly from the peak of 16% it achieved in
October. In May 2013, nginx overtook Microsoft to become the second most common
web server within the top million busiest sites and now powers almost
16% of
them.
According to the January 2014 Web Server
Survey , the web has grown by more than one third; the importance of SSL has been
highlighted by a series of spying revelations, Microsoft now power just below
30% of all web sites, and Apache has lost almost 14 percentage points of market
share. nginx, billed as the relative newcomer, saw its market share peak at 16%.
The total number of web sites discovered has increased dramatically in 2013,
from 630 million web sites in January 2013 to 861 million in January 2014
(+37%) .
Connectikpeople.co also observes that, with the revelations from the NSA
documents leaked by Edward Snowden providing months of mainstream publicity,
2013 has been a bumper year for the SSL industry. Websites are increasingly
being served over HTTPS:
48% more sites within the million busiest are using SSL than in January
2013. In total, there are over half a million more SSL certificates (+22%) in
use on the web since January 2013. The estimated total revenue of the industry
has increased even more rapidly, by 28% from September 2012 to September 2013,
reflecting the increased uptake of more expensive certificates including
Extended Validation, multi-domain, and wildcard certificates.
Apache remains the most commonly used web server on the internet, 10 million
more web sites are using it than this time last year; however Apache’s market
share has fallen by 14 percentage points since January and now stands at 42%.
Connectikpeople.co has captured the Microsoft strong year: almost 150
million more web sites use a Microsoft web server than in January 2013.
Microsoft’s share is close to 30% of the entire market and a combination of its
strong growth and the corresponding lack of growth of sites using Apache has
resulted in Apache’s lead shrinking by more than 26 percentage points to just
12.
Microsoft's own cloud platform,
Azure, has grown steadily throughout 2013, there are 39% more web-facing
computers hosted by Microsoft in January 2014 than the same time last year ,
and despite offering alternatives, Microsoft's IIS is by far the most common web server on Azure.