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Google is buying a trans-Atlantic cable, names projects after innovators

Future Google cables will be named after innovators alphabetically.

Mike Sorrentino Senior Editor
Mike Sorrentino is a Senior Editor for Mobile, covering phones, texting apps and smartwatches -- obsessing about how we can make the most of them. Mike also keeps an eye out on the movie and toy industry, and outside of work enjoys biking and pizza making.
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Google is working on a private, transatlantic cable project named Dunant.

Google

Google's internet footprint is huge, and the company is laying a long trans-Atlantic cable to help serve its customers.

The project, announced Tuesday, is named Dunant after Red Cross founder and recipient of the first Nobel Peace Prize, Henri Dunant, and is expected to be available in late 2020.

This private cable will connect from Virginia Beach in the US to the French Atlantic coast, with the company saying it will add network capacity that will supplement "one of the busiest routes on the internet."

Google's earlier intercontinental cable, which runs from the US to Chile, was named Curie after scientist Marie Curie, and Google plans to name future private cables after other innovators in an alphabetical pattern. So maybe Einstein's next?

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Correction, June 18 at 4:26 a.m. PT: An earlier version of this story misidentified the Curie cable. It's a private intercontinental cable that runs from the US to Chile.