A number of companies from the US and China plan to build networks of several thousand satellites each to enable access to the Internet from any point on Earth. These satellites will be stationed in low Earth orbit. If these plans are put into practice, the global Internet infrastructure will acquire a whole new dimension. This would have far-reaching consequences for Internet access, the security and resilience of Internet infrastructure, and power relations in global Internet governance. The home countries of the leading companies - above all the US, followed by China - would have extensive potential for political influence. They would be able to control, at the level of the Internet’s global infrastructure, the worldwide flows of informa...
Large satellite constellations in low-Earth orbit seek to be the infrastructure for global broadband...
The authors describe four emerging views of how best to govern the internet, each playing a geopolit...
In the era of space commercialization, the State is no longer the sole actor in internat...
Abstract-This paper examines satellite services that are expected be available within the next five ...
It is anticipated that by 2030, low-latency (low Earth orbit satellite-based) Internet will be carry...
The arrival of thousands of satellites posed in large constellations is providing the possibility to...
The Internet is rapidly changing the ways we communicate information around the globe today. The des...
© 2021 Elsevier Ltd As of the end of 2019, 46.4% of the world's population does not have regular acc...
Internet over satellites has been a hot research topic for some times. In addition to the developmen...
An open and global internet is in Germany's strategic interest and creates the conditions for societ...
This work examines the effect of three emerging satellite technologies on the use and regulation of ...
The internet — a fragile construction of hardware, software, standards and databases — is run by an ...
An estimated 450 million people globally do not have access to a fixed or mobile broadband signal. R...
The Internet has become a staple of modern civilized life, now as vital a utility as electricity. Bu...
In a satellite-based Internet system, satellites are used to interconnect heterogeneous network segm...
Large satellite constellations in low-Earth orbit seek to be the infrastructure for global broadband...
The authors describe four emerging views of how best to govern the internet, each playing a geopolit...
In the era of space commercialization, the State is no longer the sole actor in internat...
Abstract-This paper examines satellite services that are expected be available within the next five ...
It is anticipated that by 2030, low-latency (low Earth orbit satellite-based) Internet will be carry...
The arrival of thousands of satellites posed in large constellations is providing the possibility to...
The Internet is rapidly changing the ways we communicate information around the globe today. The des...
© 2021 Elsevier Ltd As of the end of 2019, 46.4% of the world's population does not have regular acc...
Internet over satellites has been a hot research topic for some times. In addition to the developmen...
An open and global internet is in Germany's strategic interest and creates the conditions for societ...
This work examines the effect of three emerging satellite technologies on the use and regulation of ...
The internet — a fragile construction of hardware, software, standards and databases — is run by an ...
An estimated 450 million people globally do not have access to a fixed or mobile broadband signal. R...
The Internet has become a staple of modern civilized life, now as vital a utility as electricity. Bu...
In a satellite-based Internet system, satellites are used to interconnect heterogeneous network segm...
Large satellite constellations in low-Earth orbit seek to be the infrastructure for global broadband...
The authors describe four emerging views of how best to govern the internet, each playing a geopolit...
In the era of space commercialization, the State is no longer the sole actor in internat...