Alphabet slows its fiber optic expansion plans


Alphabet slows its fiber optic expansion plans



Its Fiber division will adjust its staff by 9% due to the stoppage of the service



   Alphabet, the parent of Google, has stopped short of plans to develop its fiber optic business and has announced the dismissal of 9% of the workforce, after the main telecommunications in the United States have been up in arms.

The plan of action, renewed a year ago, leaves frozen the expansion of the fiber project in eight cities that contemplated the construction of different distribution networks by different North American towns.

The Fiber division of the search giant deployed its first network in Kansas City five years ago. With this project, Google hoped to offer its customers broadband services.

   However, the high cost and problems with works in cities have slowed the progress and progress of the implementation of fiber optics by American households.

The restructuring of the division raises doubts about the future of the broadband business. Google had initially set out with a strategic goal of using the networks to protect its basic Internet business, but Alphabet has launched a plan with new objectives that leaves the survival of Fiber in the air.

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