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Google Fiber exits Louisville, pays city $3.8M to clean up the mess it left
mardi 16 avril 2019, 17:45 , par Ars Technica
Enlarge / A Google Fiber van in Louisville. (credit: Google Fiber)
Google Fiber yesterday shut off service in Louisville, Kentucky, and has agreed to pay the local government $3.84 million to remove exposed fiber cables left behind by the ISP's failed nano-trenching experiment. Google Fiber service was scheduled to be shut off at midnight last night, according to a Louisville Metro Government (LMG) announcement of the exit agreement. Google Fiber had announced its intention to leave Louisville two months ago, admitting that it did such a bad job with fiber installation that it would have to 'essentially rebuild [the] entire network' in order to fix the problems. In Louisville, Google Fiber reportedly was burying cables in nano-trenches that were just two inches deep. The method was supposed to speed up deployment, but it didn't work as Google Fiber expected. Read 10 remaining paragraphs | Comments
https://arstechnica.com/?p=1491779
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mer. 7 mai - 19:47 CEST
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