Over the last three decades, the internet has grown at a mind-bending pace.
In 1993, there were fewer than 200 websites available on the World Wide Web.
Fast forward to 2022, and that figure has grown to 2 billion.
This animated graphic provides a historical look at the evolution of the internet, showing the most popular websites over the years from 1993 to 2022.
Please click the play button to watch the animation
The 90s to Early 2000s: Dial-Up Internet
It was possible to go on the proto-internet as early as the 1970s, but the more user-centric and widely accessible version we think of today didn’t really materialize until the early 1990s using dial-up modems.
Dial-up gave users access to the web through a modem that was connected to an active telephone line.
There were several different portals in the 1990s for internet use, such as Prodigy and CompuServe, but AOL quickly became the most popular.
AOL held its top spot as the most visited website for nearly a decade.
By June 2000, the online portal was getting over 400 million monthly visits.
For context, there were about 413 million internet users around the world at that time.
Rank | Website | Monthly Visits (May 2000) |
---|---|---|
1 | AOL | 400,891,812 |
2 | Yahoo | 387,573,587 |
3 | MSN | 354,239,803 |
4 | eBay | 116,101,785 |
5 | Lycos | 116,064,930 |
But when broadband internet hit the market and made dial-up obsolete, AOL lost its footing, and a new website took the top spot—Yahoo.
The Mid 2000s: Yahoo vs. Google
Founded in 1994, Yahoo started off as a web directory that was originally called “Jerry and David’s Guide to the World Wide Web.”
When the company started to pick up steam, its name changed to Yahoo, which became a backronym that stands for “Yet Another Hierarchical Officious Oracle.”
Yahoo grew fast and by the early 2000s, it became the most popular website on the internet.
It held its top spot for several years—by April 2004, Yahoo was receiving 5.6 billion monthly visits.
Rank | Website | Monthly Visits (April 2004) |
---|---|---|
1 | Yahoo | 5,658,032,268 |
2 | MSN | 1,838,700,057 |
3 | 1,318,276,780 | |
4 | AOL | 905,009,947 |
5 | eBay | 805,474,705 |
But Google was close on its heels.
Founded in 1998, Google started out as a simpler and more efficient search engine, and the website quickly gained traction.
Funny enough, Google was actually Yahoo’s default search engine in the early 2000s until Yahoo dropped Google so it could use its own search engine technology in 2004.
For the next few years, Google and Yahoo competed fiercely, and both names took turns at the top of the most popular websites list.
Then, in the 2010s, Yahoo’s trajectory started to head south after a series of missed opportunities and unsuccessful moves.
This cemented Google’s place at the top, and the website is still the most popular website as of January 2022.
The Late 2000s, Early 2010s: Social Media Enters the Chat
While Google has held its spot at the top for nearly two decades, it’s worth highlighting the emergence of social media platforms like YouTube and Facebook.
YouTube and Facebook certainly weren’t the first social media platforms to gain traction.
MySpace had a successful run back in 2007—at one point, it was the third most popular website on the World Wide Web.
Rank | Website | Monthly Visits (Jan 2007) |
---|---|---|
1 | 7,349,521,929 | |
2 | Yahoo | 5,169,762,311 |
3 | MySpace | 1,276,515,128 |
4 | MSN | 1,259,467,102 |
5 | eBay | 957,928,554 |
But YouTube and Facebook marked a new era for social media platforms, partly because of their impeccable timing.
Both platforms entered the scene around the same time that smartphone innovations were turning the mobile phone industry on its head.
The iPhone’s design, and the introduction of the App store in 2008, made it easier than ever to access the internet via your mobile device.
As of January 2022, YouTube and Facebook are still the second and third most visited websites on the internet.
The 2020s: Google is Now Synonymous With the Internet
Google is the leading search engine by far, making up about 90% of all web, mobile, and in-app searches.
What will the most popular websites be in a few years?
Will Google continue to hold the top spot?
There are no signs of the internet giant slowing down anytime soon, but if history has taught us anything, it’s that things change.
And no one should get too comfortable at the top.