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Two Worlds: Languages ​​IRL and Online

Two worlds: IRL and online languages ​​– @shutterstock | pathdoc

Two worlds: IRL and online languages ​​– @shutterstock | pathdoc

“IRL” is the abbreviation for “In Real Life”.

Global networking has always been hampered by language barriers. Even if you have the latest smartphone or tablet, surfing the Internet would be pointless if all the content appeared in a foreign language you couldn't understand. There are of course technological solutions, especially translation programs like Google Translate, but they still need further development to improve their reliability. Unfortunately, for people who cannot speak or understand English, there is a significant gap between the languages ​​used online and in the real world.

Chinese (including all of its variants such as Mandarin and Wu) is the most widely spoken language worldwide with an estimated 1.3 billion native speakers, representing 16 percent of the world's population, according to Ethnologue However, the web is dominated by another language, with English accounting for 54 percent of the top 10 million websites. According to W3Techs , which analyzes website technology. Although it dominates the real world, China is further down the online pecking order, accounting for just 1.7 percent of websites.

There is also a significant gap in real life and the Internet, which has 442 million native speakers but only accounts for 5 percent of websites. Even though German is the third most spoken language on the Internet, it still does not appear in the top 10 list of the most spoken languages ​​in the world.

In addition to difficulties in understanding and barriers to access, scientists warn that a lack of linguistic diversity online could be contributing to the death of some languages ​​around the world.

“IRL” is short for “In real life.”

Global connectivity has always been tested and inhibited by language barriers. Even if you have the latest smartphone or tablet, surfing the web would be meaningless if all of the content appears in a foreign language you cannot understand. There are technological solutions of course, particularly translation programs like Google Translate, but they still need further development to improve their reliability. Unfortunately for people who cannot speak or understand English, there is a considerable gap between languages ​​used online and in the real world.

Chinese (including all of its varieties such as Mandarin and Wu) is the most spoken language worldwide with an estimated 1.3 billion native speakers, equating to 16 percent of the global population, according to Ethnologue . The web is dominated by another language, however, with English accounting for 54 percent of the top 10 million websites. That's according to W3Techs who analyze the technology of websites. Even though it dominates the real world, Chinese is further down the online pecking order, accounting for just 1.7 percent of websites.

There is also a sizeable real life and online gap in Spanish which has 442 million native-speakers but accounts for a mere 5 percent of websites. Even though German is actually the third most common language online, it still doesn't appear on the top-10 list of the world's most spoken languages. In addition to making accessibility and understanding difficult, scientists have warned that a lack of language diversity online could be contributing to the death of some languages ​​across the world.

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