how is america owning the internet if 40% is owned by russia and china. Your own map you posted shows it
Look at the size of the dots. Google alone is bigger than the top 5 chinese sites, and that does NOT include all the local Google sites. 3 or 4 American sites are bigger than the total area of Russia - Russia collectively does not attract 45% of internet users (not that many people even speak Russian or are willing to translate). The black space doesn't count, only the area inside the circles.
Yangdex.ru is the biggest site in Russia, gets visits from 2.47% of internet users. Google gets 45%, 20 times as much.
World rankings, per that Internet map:
1) Google 45% of internet users visit Google
2) Facebook 41%
3) Youtube 32%
4) Yahoo! 15%
5) Baidu 13% (Chinese)
6) Wikipedia 12%
7) Amazon 9%
8) Twitter 8%
9) qq 7% (Chinese)
10) Taobao 6% (Chinese)
...
14) Sina 5% (Chinese)
....
20) Yangdex.ru 2.8%
Couldn't find the 5th Chinese site, I expect its in the 5% range atm.
In the short term, the US is the center of the internet. Too much of the tech is designed and introduced here. China will surpass the US in the medium term, as it simply has more people. Whether this means it takes center stage on the internet is a bit of a question, as China has not been as good at getting others to adopt it's services as the US has - see Google, Facebook, Amazon, etc. It will be interesting to see if Alibaba is able to go international. I don't see Russia being competitive in the foreseeable future. Doesn't use common latin script, doesn't have the population or wealth, and has made itself unpopular outside of its home country (with the possible exceptions of poor regimes nearby, which won't help as they are not interested in Russian culture, China particularly).
The up-and-coming countries, the ones that could match the US eventually are China, India, and Brazil. In the long run, Nigeria may be able to become a player. They have vibrant, growing cultures, and are not bent on scaring the hell out of their neighbors (well, maybe China, a little). Russia is shrinking. It is a closed culture, in the sense of being very inward looking, not open to outside influences, with very restrictive regulatory rules on information dissemination. Not a recipe for taking over the Internet. Sorry, your country is in the Internet's backwaters and likely to stay that way.
The traffic map show Europe having a large role in the world, but Russia is not "Europe" only a small outlying piece of the whole. UK, France and Germany are the central players. In any case, the US link with Asia is stronger than Europe's link, and Europe is barely linked to S America at all. Europe has better links only with Africa - not exactly a major player at this time.