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Google The Internet

Google's Free Wi-Fi in India Now Live in 100 Railway Stations; 15,000 New Users Connect to Web Everyday (mashable.com) 46

Last year, Google CEO Sundar Pichai announced the company will be bringing free Wi-Fi to 100 railway stations in India by the end of 2016. The company began, what was the "the largest public Wi-Fi project in the world", in India earlier this year. Today, it announced its free Wi-Fi has reached 100th Indian railway station in the country. From a report: Google announced Thursday its free Wi-Fi is now working at the 100 busiest railway stations in India. Over five million people in the country latch onto Google's free internet service every month, with 15,000 of them accessing the internet for the first time in their lives every day, the company said. The growth of what Google described as "the largest public Wi-Fi project in the world" is in line with company's expectations. Interestingly, Google has partnered with Indian government-run RailTel ISP for free internet service, and it lets users access as much data as they want and visit whichever website they would like. This is in contrast to Facebook's Free Basics, which offered Indians access to select websites. The Indian government earlier this year banned Free Basics on the grounds of net neutrality. Nobody in India has an issue with Google's approach.
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Google's Free Wi-Fi in India Now Live in 100 Railway Stations; 15,000 New Users Connect to Web Everyday

Comments Filter:
  • Every -space- day (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward
    Isn't "everyday" an adjective? I think it should be "every day" in the headline.
  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday December 22, 2016 @02:55PM (#53538847)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • while charging America 100/month.
    • by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Thursday December 22, 2016 @03:18PM (#53539009) Journal
      BTW, it is not foreign brown ppl. That is where the new google CEO is from. He is simply shutting down projects in America and transferring them to India.
    • Google: Hi, Indian government, we'd like to partner w/ you to provide free internet to people at railway stations

      Facebook: Hi, Indian government, we'd like to provide some internet for free to people

  • >> Google has partnered with Indian government-run RailTel ISP for free internet service

    "Free" for...the users, sure (assuming ticket prices remain constant and there aren't any "station fees" or the like), but who's paying who for what in the "partnership?"

     
    • "Free" for...the users, sure (assuming ticket prices remain constant and there aren't any "station fees" or the like), but who's paying who for what in the "partnership?"

      You are confusing "free" with "gratis", don't you?

      • 'Gratis' is pretty much the standard meaning of 'free'. Only in Dick Stallman's Utopian world does it mean something beyond altruistic
        • Not really. In English, one word has two meanings. In French, they have two distinct words, libre and gratuit for the speech and beer contexts.

          This is a rare example of the amphibian chompers actually getting something right.

          • In English, one could use the term 'liberated' to describe software of the type that Stallman was describing, and it would be perfectly accurate. Reason he doesn't is that that word is also associated w/ Marxist, which he doesn't want associated w/ it, even though he is normally a Green Party supporter
    • The interesting point to note here is that RailTel is already an telecom/ISP company that has existed for decades, connecting all Indian Railways offices and stations, open only to railway employees though. As a search giant and software services provider, what technical expertise exactly Google is providing here, is not clear.
  • by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Thursday December 22, 2016 @03:15PM (#53538979) Journal
    but extend free wifi in his native India, along with sending most job openings to India.
    Way to go google.
    • Google is a global company. Why is any country more deserving than another as recipients of Google's projects?

      • Google Inc. is not a "global company." It is a Delaware corporation with headquarters in Mountain View, CA.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by swb ( 14022 )

        I'd like to know how successful a "global" company like Google would be without the political weight of the American economy, diplomacy and ultimately, military behind it.

        Google owes its success globally to the extent that it can count on the American government to back it up overseas, otherwise it would be just another listening post and censorship arm of a bunch of third world kleptocracies and dictatorships.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      fuck your dirty face
      with fifteen rusty old spoons
      you raw shit burglar

    • but extend free wifi in his native India, along with sending most job openings to India.
      Way to go google.

      India is welcoming them with open arms. Trying to get legal permission to install fiber and give people in the USA decent internet service is an uphill battle. Where do you suggest they should spend their effort? I suspect that they'll get more out of putting their energy someplace that welcomes their input.

      • actually, local gov are BEGGING Google. The issue is that the GOP at the state and national levels are fighting it for their fascist friends.
        However, the google fiber is a money maker, while the indian wifi is a free give-away. BIG DIFFERENCE.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Power of the Internets [indianexpress.com]

    PR0N FTW.

  • "Every day" means each 24-hour rotation of the globe.
    "Everyday" means mediocre.

  • My city has a lovely central park and mild weather all year 'round. Our park is populated with museums, exotic plants, colorful buskers entertaining visitors from around the world, and free wifi.

    We also have lots of homeless people. They swarm to the park with their cell phones and chargers to enjoy YooToob and other amusements. There is an uncomfortable discrepancy between the wealthy visitors and the local homeless. We don't quite know how to reconcile that.

    India may also see a shift in the mobile populat

  • When I was in India several years ago, it was not possible to get onto the Internet without proof of identity. In order to use a computer at a cyber cafe, I had to provide my passport, whose number was duly recorded in a register along with the beginning and ending times of my session. Considering the terrorism attacks since then, I would expect that practice to continue.

    So how is the Google/RailTel access handled? Do people have to provide proof of identity to establish an account? Is it actually open? En

    • Seems it first takes you to a webpage where you provide your mobile number. You get a OTP (a pin, say 8 digits, One Time Passcode) on your mobile which you enter to continue; So basically they can track you by your mobile#.
  • Coincidentally, 15,000 is the number of passengers on the roof of each train.

  • by jbn-o ( 555068 ) <mail@digitalcitizen.info> on Thursday December 22, 2016 @07:18PM (#53540393) Homepage

    Nobody in India has an issue with Google's approach.

    That's an extraordinary claim. This requires extraordinary evidence. I doubt you have the evidence to stand behind this. You presented no evidence of this. It reads as if you're saying there are no Indians who understand that it is in Google's interest to continue to offer gratis services which feed a business model built in part on spying thus making their network service a trap.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    ...But I, personally, deeply dislike this trend of providing easy internet access to large swathes of people from the third world without any thought as to how it might impact the rest of the world.

    I don't hate brown people, nor do I hate poor people, but what I do hate is the fact that, as time has gone on, I have consistently seen more and more attempted attacks against the various companies I've worked with originate from these impoverished countries.

    Call me a racist, classist, white middle class male al

We are each entitled to our own opinion, but no one is entitled to his own facts. -- Patrick Moynihan

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