Google
intends to finance, build and help operate wireless networks from
sub-Saharan Africa to Southeast Asia, hoping to connect a billion or so
people in emerging countries to the internet, the Wall Street Journal
reported on Friday.
The internet search giant -
which has for years espoused universal web access - is employing a
patchwork quilt of technologies and holding discussions with regulators
from South Africa to Kenya, the WSJ cited people familiar with the
strategy as saying.
Access to the vast trove of
information on the Internet, and the tools to make use of it, is
considered key to lifting economies up the value chain. But countries
are often hampered by the vast sums needed to build infrastructure,
thorny regulations or geographical terrain.
To
reach its goal, Google, which benefits the more people have access to
its search and other internet services, is lobbying regulators to use
airwaves reserved for television broadcasts, which at lower frequencies
can pass through buildings and over longer distances, the WSJ reported.
It
is also working on providing low-cost cellphones and employing balloons
or blimps to transmit signals over hundreds of square miles from high
altitudes.
The company has already begun
several small-scale trials, including in Cape Town, South Africa, where
it is using a base station in conjunction with wireless access boxes to
broadcast signals over several miles, the newspaper reported.
Chief
executive Larry Page has made no secret of his plans to use his company
to work toward broader, non-profit goals. Google on Friday declined to
comment on its plans.

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