*By Chloe Aiello and Alex Heath* Tech giants like Google and Facebook are heavily invested in getting more people online around the world. But the rate of internet growth is actually slowing even as the world's population continues to swell in size. Today, almost half the world's population uses the internet. And as world leaders devise strategies to bring the other half online, they've noticed something surprising: internet uptake is slowing. [According to a new report](https://webfoundation.org/research/the-case-for-the-web/) from the non-profit Web Foundation, internet use was rising by about 12 percent per year from about 2005 to 2014. Since 2015, that's slowed to about 6.5 percent annually. "You expect uptake to increase and then go up quite rapidly, which it's been doing, and then at some point it's going to top off, naturally," Web Foundation CEO Adrian Lovett told Cheddar's Alex Heath at the Web Summit conference in Lisbon, Portugal. "But nobody expects that to happen at about the 50 percent mark." Lovett explained the challenges inherent to the Web Foundation's aim to establish the internet as a public good and a basic right for all. internet tech companies like Google ($GOOGL) and Facebook ($FB are also motivated to expand internet use ー but likely for different reasons. Facebook and Google have gone to serious lengths to connect people in developing countries to the internet. Facebook introduced its limited internet service, Free Basics, only to have it fail spectacularly [in Myanmar.](https://techcrunch.com/2018/05/01/facebook-free-basics-ending-myanmar-internet-org/) and India. Google's Project Loon also uses balloons to bring wireless internet to remote areas. Lovett of the Web Foundation, an organization which was founded by creator of the worldwide web Tim Berners-Lee, offered some theories as to why the rate of internet growth is still declining. "There's an affordability issue, there's a question about skills ... whether people have, particularly women, have the digital literacy needed to engage online, and then there's a question of content online," he said. "We have to make sure that the web ー the experience of using the web ー has some utility, has value to people," he added. Even with all the resources available to internet advocates and tech giants, Lovett emphasized that no one's really sure why internet uptake is slowing. "Truthfully, nobody's quite sure the answer to why," he said. For the full interview with Web Foundation CEO Adrian Lovett, [click here](https://cheddar.com/videos/big-tech-and-the-open-web). For full interview [click here](https://cheddar.com/videos/big-tech-and-the-open-web).

Share:
More In Business
Supergoop! CEO Discusses Sunscreen Brand That's 100% Dedicated to Suncare
Supergoop! is a skincare brand whose products are what the company says is 100% dedicated to sun care. Amanda Baldwin, CEO of Supergoop!, joined Cheddar News to discuss why sunscreen is important to add to daily routines. "What I love about this company is ... it really is based on scientific fact," Baldwin said. "90% of the signs of aging comes from the sun ... one in five of us will be diagnosed with skin cancer in our lifetime so making sunscreen a daily habit is probably one of the most simple things you can do for your health."
More U.S. High School Grads Opt for Trade School
College enrollment rates for high school graduates in the U.S. has been on the decline since 2009. Sean Behr, CEO of Fountain a high-volume hiring platform, joined Cheddar News to discuss why high school graduates are benefitting from the value of attending a trade school, especially in today's economy.
Load More