Nevertheless, it's not an accurate data, just a representation of exchanges traffic because there are countries block acces to bitcoin or simply banned anything related to cryptocurrency.
And if those countries block anything related to bitcoin how do you expect that country to have anything close to significant in terms of usage and traffic?
Germany should also be in the top list, there are a lot of online stores that accepts bitcoin as payment.
Germany at least made it into the graph, but as I said, look for France and Spain which are not even there.
So you have a country with 70mil and a GDP per capita of 40k$ and another one with 45 mils and 38k/capita not listed there, but you have in top Andorra, a country squeezed between those, with an entire population that would make it the 98th largest town in Spain and the 65th in France.
And a lot, a lot of things that are at least weird, like Peru and Algeria going ahead of Germany and Italy combined.
I did not expect that the bitcoin exchange traffic is only circulating in 6 countries. I find it surreal to the point that it looks like bitcoin global adoption seem impossible.
But can you deal with the fact that 85% of the bitcoin ATMs are located in the US and Canada?
The numbers are indeed wrong because they tell only one part of the story, traffic, and you can have 100 people visiting the site and closing down without doing trade and you can have 10 making 1000BTC in trading a day.