Many large corporations such as Facebook, SpaceX and Google have repeatedly stated that they are developing a global Internet that will provide access to the World Wide Web anywhere in the world. And recently it became known that China is also entering this race, represented by LinkSure Network, whose specialists say that by 2026 they will be able to provide satellite Internet for all inhabitants of the Earth. And it's completely free.
According to ABC, LinkSure will launch 272 satellites into orbits of different heights to create a branched coverage structure. In an interview with ABC, LinkSure Network's press service noted the following:
To implement the project, the company is launching a program to launch LinkSure Swarm satellites, the first of which, with the laconic name LinkSure No. 1, is to be launched from the Jiuquan cosmodrome in northwestern China in 2019 on board one of the Chinese Long March missiles. Ten more satellites will be launched into orbit by 2020.
According to a 2017 United Nations report, an estimated 3.9 billion people still lack internet access. And the first LinkSure satellites will have to provide Internet to precisely those areas that have traditionally been outside the global network. According to LinkSure Network Executive Director Wang Jining, Vladimir Kuznetsov