⚡ Networking in the British Virgin Islands

Networking technologies are protocols, standards, and mechanisms that provide secure and reliable delivery of web content, data exchange management, security policies, and performance optimization between servers and clients.

The British Virgin Islands is a Caribbean British Overseas Territory with a population of around 31 thousand people.

According to our data, networking technologies are used on 80.6% of websites from the British Virgin Islands.

⭐ Most Popular in 2026

The following chart shows the top networking technologies in the British Virgin Islands in 2026, based on market share.

The most popular is Cookies, which dominates the market with an overwhelming 89.9% share.
It is followed by ♯ ETag with 7.7% and TLS with 4.1%.

🚀 Highlights

Here is a list of the top technologies that are more popular in the British Virgin Islands than worldwide.
Differences between global and country rankings are shown in parentheses.

✨ Best Networking Technologies

Below is a more detailed list of 10 networking technologies used on sites from the British Virgin Islands, ranked by their market share.

RankNameMarket share
1
Cookies
Fremont, California, United States

Small pieces of data that a website sends to a visitor's web browser when they visit.

2
♯ ETag
Fremont, California, United States

An identifier for a specific version of a resource that is used for cache validation.

3
TLS
Fremont, California, United States

A cryptographic protocol that provides end-to-end encryption of data transmitted over the Internet, ensuring confidentiality, integrity, and authentication between communicating systems.

4
HTTP 2+
Fremont, California, United States

An application-layer protocol used to transfer resources such as HTML documents, images, and other web content, forming the foundation of data communication in web browsers.

5
HSTS
Fremont, California, United States

The HTTP Strict Transport Security standard ensures that a user's browser always connects to a website using HTTPS.

6
↪ Redirect

Cross-domain redirection that sends visitors to a different domain.

7
CSP
Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States

The Content-Security-Policy HTTP response header and meta tag are used to control what resources a given page can load.

8
CORS
Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States

An HTTP header-based mechanism used to safely bypass same-origin policy and allow requests to other domains.

9
QUIC
Fremont, California, United States

A multiplexed transport layer network protocol built on top of UDP, originally developed at Google.

10
FTP
Fremont, California, United States

A standard network protocol for transferring files between a server and a client.

Data is based on the analysis of 3,722 websites from the British Virgin Islands.
Statistics were last calculated on .
For details, see our methodology and disclaimer.