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Wiring the World By Elijah Schmieg & Alex Prui Recently, Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Facebook, visited a small, rural town in India called Chandauli. Vising this o the charts town seems like a rarity for the 14 th richest man in the world. What could he possibly want there? His purpose was to take a look at a new computer center that would serve his ulmate mission of connecng the enre world to the Internet. Zuckerberg said in a statement to Time Magazines “We were thinking about the rst decade of the company, and what were the next set of big things that we wanted to take on, and we came to this realizaon that connecng a billion people is an awesome milestone, but there’s nothing magical about the number 1 billion. If your mission is to connect the world, then a billion might just be bigger than any other service that had been built. But that doesn’t mean that you’re anywhere near fullling the actual mission.” To fulll “the actual mission,” Zuckerberg would have to get 4.3 billion people internet access. Zuckerberg gured that it would probably take billions, or even maybe low tens of bil- lions of dollars to get everyone in the world online. Aer making a few calls, he formed a coa- lion of technology companies that includes Ericsson, Qualcomm, Nokia, and Samsung. This group calls themselves Internet.org and they describe themselves as “a global partnership be- tween technology leaders, nonprots, local communies and experts who are working to- gether to bring the Internet to the two - thirds of the world’s populaon that doesn’t have it.” Internet.org used maps and data from Ericsson, NASA, the Gridded Populaon of the World, and Facebook’s user base to discover that 85% of the human populaon already have inter- net access or a minimal sense that they live within range of a cell tower with at least a 2G da- ta network. They’re just not using it. Some people just don’t have enough money for a phone and data plan or don’t know much about the internet. Some people don’t care because they feel that it is irrelevant to their daily lives. With 7 billion people on the planet, how can Zuckerberg reach his goal with only 1 bil- lion? Half of the world has no clue what the Internet is and what it can do. If Mark met his goal of the enre world, the rate the Internet grew would have to at least double. Inter- net.org may argue that they have already connected 85% of the world, but much of that per- centage is people who sll don’t know they have the Internet. However, with Internet.org consisng of companies whose money totals to nearly 100 billion dollars, there really isn’t an- ything they can’t do. Even if Zuckerberg isn’t the one to wire the world, it has to happen someday.
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