These are the most popular sites right now, and they might surprise you.

These are the most popular sites right now, and they might surprise you.
Site traffic rankings are largely predictable, dominated by the giants of global search, e-commerce, and social media. However, there are some notable caveats (and even taboos), new data suggest. According to a Similarweb analysis, the adult sites Xvideos and Pornhub are among the most visited in the US, receiving an average of 693,5 million and 639,6 million monthly visitors, respectively. The two porn giants outperform several major services, including Netflix (541 million), Zoom (629,5 million), and Twitch (255,3 million). Also, these sites are growing at a faster rate than almost any other high-traffic domain. While Xvideos' user base grew 2,63% month-on-month, sites like Wikipedia saw their pageviews drop at a similar rate and only Amazon saw a higher growth rate in traffic at 7,49%. . Of the top 20 websites, four are classified as porn: Xvideos (#11), Pornhub (#13), Xnxx (#16), and Jerkmate (#20).

Google is by far the most active website in the world, attracting 19.500 billion US visitors per month, more than 3 times the number of any other site. YouTube (also owned by Google) is second on the list with 6.500 billion monthly visitors, followed by Facebook with 4.000 billion. Unsurprisingly, Amazon is the largest online retailer in the United States, attracting two billion monthly visitors, followed by eBay and Walmart. Similar web data suggests that eCommerce sites like these have experienced some of the fastest development rates in recent months. The publisher with the most US traffic is Yahoo, in fifth overall with 1.800 billion monthly visitors, ahead of CNN, ESPN, MSN and, a little further behind, the New York Times. Although Google dominates the global search market, privacy-focused service DuckDuckGo has risen to an impressive 18th place. The relatively niche search engine even surpasses Microsoft Bing, attracting around 50 million additional visitors a month, suggesting that American Internet users are taking their data security more seriously.