Australian magazine Communications Day claimed that the search giant is in talks with Asian and Australian companies over the 'Unity' project to lay a Google-owned line from the west coast of the US to the Asian subcontinent.
The move would provide Google with substantial future cost savings, since it would give an 'at cost' link to the fastest growing internet population on the planet and reduce the company's dependence on third parties.
"Additional infrastructure for the internet is good for users and there are a number of proposals to add a Pacific submarine cable. We are not commenting on any of these plans," said a Google spokesman.
The proposed line could be in service by the end of 2009.
Up to 80 per cent of the world's communications are carried by undersea cables, the most advanced of which can transfer seven terabytes of data every second. There are five trans-pacific cables in operation and another one already planned.
Google building Pacific fibre cable
By
Iain Thomson
on Sep 25, 2007 6:47AM

Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.
Partner Content

Tech Buying Budgets for SMBs on the Rise

Channel faces AI-fuelled risk as partners lag on data resilience, Dicker Data summit told
_(11).jpg&h=142&w=230&c=1&s=1)
The Compliance Dilemma for Technology Partners: Risk, Revenue, and Reputation

Promoted Content
From Insight to Opportunity: How SMB Service Demand is Shaping the Next Growth Wave for Partners

Shure Microsoft Certified Audio for Teams Rooms