Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:
The Cuban government has announced a two-month trial scheme to allow internet access in private homes.
State-run telecommunications company Etecsa will install internet in some 2,000 homes in the capital's colonial district, Old Havana.
The company has also reduced by 25% the fee charged to connect to the web, which most Cubans can only access from public wi-fi hotspots.
Cuba has one of the lowest online connectivity rates in the world.
Many Cubans hope the country's communist government will eventually expand the scheme, says the BBC's Will Grant in Havana.
Details are scarce, but the authorities say the experiment will be extended if it is approved after the two-month trial period.
Last week, Etecsa signed an agreement with Google to provide faster access to content including Gmail and YouTube.
-- submitted from IRC
(Score: 2) by looorg on Tuesday December 20 2016, @12:24PM
The glorious leader is going to allow 2000, hand picked, citizens to enjoy the modernity of the total surveillance society from the comfort of their own hovel. What is not to like ...
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 21 2016, @02:03AM
Warning them of the perils of non-private society... then I thought 'they are communists, they probably already know what it is like, and privacy be damned.'
So we will see.