 Over a third of the world's homes now have internet access. In the developing world, over 20% of households have internet access. That's more than the global average in 2006, but only half the Broadband Commission's target for 2015. Growth in the developing world is much faster than in the developed world. Up 23.3% between 2010 and 2011 compared to 5.7% in the developed world. But the battle is not yet won. More than three-quarters of households globally have a television set. But only a third of the world's households have internet access. A decade ago, just 8% of the world's population was online. By the beginning of 2012, that had grown to 32.5%. Most internet growth is now coming from the developing world. There were 252 million new internet users worldwide last year, and 207 million of them came from developing countries. Internet penetration in the developing world grew a staggering tenfold from just 2.1% in the year 2000 to reach 24.4% by the beginning of 2012. In the UN-designated least-developed countries, growth is even faster. Internet penetration in the LDCs jumped from 3.6% to 6% in just two years. But there is still much to be done. Over 70% of people in the developed world are now using the internet. But only 24% of people in the developing world are online, and just 6% of people in LDCs.