Showing posts with label Free Internet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Free Internet. Show all posts

Friday, January 16, 2015

How Mark Zuckerberg plans to bring free Internet to the world


BOGOTA - Facebook Inc Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg launched a free Internet application in Colombia on Wednesday as part of a drive to bring developing markets online, but remained mute on when and if the company would look to move into China.

Colombia is the first nation in Latin America and the fourth in the world to receive the new Internet.org service, in partnership with local mobile phone provider Tigo, but the aim is to push the app globally, Zuckerberg told Reuters.

The mobile app, aimed at low income and rural users, offers more than a dozen tools via the Android operating system - like encyclopedia Wikipedia, weather websites, job listings and health information, as well as Facebook's own social network and messaging service - without the user incurring any data charges. It has already been launched in three countries in Africa, including Zambia.

During his first trip to Bogota, the billionaire founder of Facebook said the app would spread very quickly as phone operators reap the benefits of increased revenue from new customers using the services.

"Our goal is to make the Internet.org program available across the world and to help everyone get connected to the Internet," the 30-year old Zuckerberg said.

"We're going to look back a year from now and there will hopefully be a lot more countries that have programs like this."

Although he declined to say where the program would be launched next, he is betting the application will soon be the "default" among mobile operators worldwide to expand Internet access. Those not offering the service will be "lagging" behind.

It "will stop being that only the most visionary and forward-leaning operators want to start doing it and it'll start being the case that it's more the default, right, where it's almost like you're not doing it if you're lagging," said Zuckerberg, dressed in his trademark jeans and gray T-shirt.

Asked when he would look to move into China, Zuckerberg said: "Who knows ... that's very different."

Zuckerberg and Xiaomi Inc CEO Lei Jun discussed a potential investment by Facebook in China's top smartphone maker ahead of its $1.1 billion fundraising last month, but a deal never materialized, several people with knowledge of the matter told Reuters. The company has declined comment.

He would not be drawn either on whether recent time spent in Mexico City with telecoms billionaire Carlos Slim would result in a similar Internet.org project, or some another venture.

"I'm not going to say anything specific about any partnership that's not final, but, I mean, we're going to want to work with folks across the world on a number of things."

He said the next launch of Internet.org could be as soon as six months.

The 30-year-old Harvard drop-out met President Juan Manuel Santos earlier on Wednesday and the two officially launched the Internet.org application at the presidential palace.

The tools offered by the service provide a foundation Colombians can use to "build their own prosperity", Zuckerberg said.

"By giving people these basic tools for free, you're creating an equal playing field," he said, referring to entrepreneurs who could use the free Internet to start or grow a business.

The service may even aid Colombia, which has 21 million Facebook users, as it seeks an end to 50 years of war with Marxist rebels, Zuckerberg said.

"Just giving people the tools of connectivity is important by itself in creating communication and a tighter social fabric in creating peace."

Facebook has partnered with more than 150 wireless providers over the past four years to offer free or discounted access to its social network, but the new app is the first that has added services beyond its own website.

While 85 percent of the global population lives in areas with mobile phone coverage, only 30 percent have access to the Internet. Around 3 billion people will have online access by the end of 2014, the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) has said.

Facebook hopes the Internet.org project will help more than 4 billion Internet-less people worldwide, many of whom live in Africa and India.

The initiative has the potential to boost the size of Facebook's audience, which totals 1.32 billion monthly users.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Monday, April 16, 2012

Web freedom facing greatest threat: Google founder


LONDON — The principles of openness and universal access that underpinned the Internet’s creation are facing their greatest-ever threat, the co-founder of Google Sergey Brin said in an interview published by Britain’s Guardian newspaper on Monday.

Brin said the threat to freedom of the Internet came from a combination of factors, including increasing efforts by governments to control access and communication by their citizens.

Brin said attempts by the entertainment industry to crack down on piracy, and the rise of “restrictive” walled gardens such as Facebook and Apple, which tightly control what software can be released on their platforms, were also leading to greater restrictions on the Internet.

“There are very powerful forces that have lined up against the open Internet on all sides and around the world,” Brin was quoted as saying. “I am more worried than I have been in the past. It’s scary.”

He said he was concerned by efforts of countries such as China, Saudi Arabia and Iran to censor and restrict use of the Internet.

Brin said the rise of Facebook and Apple, which have their own proprietary platforms and control access to their users, risked stifling innovation and balkanizing the web.

source: interaksyon.com

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Pentagon suffers Internet access outage


WASHINGTON — An unspecified number of Defense Department personnel in the Washington D.C. area and in the Midwest were cut off from the public Internet for nearly three hours on Thursday because of technical problems, a department spokeswoman said Friday.

The outage was not caused by any malicious activity, said the spokeswoman, Air Force Lieutenant Colonel April Cunningham. She said the networks are back up and operating at normal capacity.

Defense Department users were cut off “due to technical issues at three of the (Department of Defense) gateways interfacing to commercial Internet access points,” Cunningham said in an email.

The department’s Defense Information Security Agency worked with commercial vendors and “mission partners” to reroute critical DoD traffic and to mitigate the issue until technical issues were resolved, she said.

The number of people affected by the outage was not known, “but is estimated in the thousands, given the number of people who work in the Pentagon,” Cunningham told Reuters.

source: interaksyon.com

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Verizon FiOS TV launching with 26 channels for Xbox Live

Verizon's live television offering for Xbox Live is coming next month, the company announced today.

Starting in December, Xbox Live Gold members will be able to download a Verizon FiOS TV application to their consoles. Upon doing so, and as long as they're both Verizon TV and Internet subscribers, they'll be able to watch live programming on 26 channels through Verizon's service. Verizon didn't say which channels will be offered, but it did acknowledge that the selection will depend "on the customer's TV package."

Microsoft announced a wide-ranging television agreement last month with a host of service and content providers. At the the time, the software giant said that it had inked deals with approximately 50 companies around the world, including Bravo, Comcast, HBO Go, and others, to provide their content through the Xbox. The move is part of a broader strategy on Microsoft's part to make the Xbox a key component in the living room, outside of gaming.

To help it achieve that goal, Microsoft is relying heavily upon its Kinect motion-gaming device. In fact, Verizon said today that Kinect owners will be able to control its FiOS TV service with "voice and gesture commands" through the peripheral.

To sweeten the pot a bit for Xbox owners, Verizon is offering a special deal that includes FiOS TV and Internet and phone service, starting at $89.99 per month. Customers who sign up between now and January 21 will also receive 12 free months of Xbox Live Gold service and a copy of the upcoming Halo: Combat Evolved Anniversary game.


source: http://news.cnet.com/8301-13506_3-57332844-17/verizon-fios-tv-launching-with-26-channels-for-xbox-live/?tag=mncol

Monday, June 14, 2010

Free Wi-Fi At Starbucks Coming July 1st

Free at last. Today, Starbucks announced its plan to offer free Wi-Fi Internet access beginning July 1.

After seeing its first increase in customers in 13 quarters, the Seattle-based coffee company will offer free Wi-Fi through AT&T at 6,700 locations nation-wide, a decision that came just six months after McDonalds began offering free Wi-Fi to customers in 11,500 of its locations. Though the move could be seen as an attempt to take the edge away from the fast food franchise, which rolled out its own successful McCafe gourmet coffee line, the most interesting part of the announcement concerns the amount of free online access available exclusively for Starbucks customers.

Dubbed the Starbucks Digital Network, the Wi-Fi portal will allow free access to paid sites like the Wall Street Journal, along with exclusive downloads from other sites like iTunes, The New York Times, Patch, USA TODAY, Yahoo and Zagat, according to the AP. No word on how the network will work with mobile users.


Source: http://techland.com/2010/06/14/free-wi-fi-at-starbucks-coming-july-1st/