Berlin Minister Alexander Schweitzer in the Mainz Ministry of Digitization did not want to believe all the promises, so the SPD politician commissioned TÜV Rheinland for security: The small start-up One Fiber rightly advertises the construction of a 27,000-kilometer-long fiber optic network along the German rail network, which is state-of-the-art is and also tap-proof and safe from cyber attacks? Could the Internet really help to connect every household in the rural Rhineland-Palatinate to the fast Internet at low cost, making complex and expensive subsidy programs unnecessary?
The answer from the consultants at Tüv Rheinland was so clear that Schweitzer signed a letter of intent this Thursday with Klaus Kremper, the head of One Fiber and former head of the freight transport division of Deutsche Bahn AG.
One Fiber: Rural areas should benefit from a fiber optic network
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