stringtranslate.com

Internet in Chile

The Internet in Chile has its roots in experimental tests conducted in 1986 between the Universidad de Chile and the Universidad de Santiago de Chile, the two main public universities in the country. Its commercialization began in the mid-1990s, and it experienced widespread adoption in the second half of the 2000s. Before this, Chile had previously attempted the Cybersyn project in 1971, which aimed to establish an almost real-time economic information transfer system with the government, but it did not succeed.[1]

As of 2023 the Internet has become an essential part of Chilean society, with an estimated 17.69 million people, equivalent to 90.2% of the national population, having access to an Internet connection.[2] These connections are provided entirely by the private sector and are available in various technologies such as hybrid fiber-coaxial, fiber to the home, mobile broadband, satellite Internet, and xDSL, offering a wide range of speeds and costs.

To facilitate international communication, Chile relies mainly on five submarine cables situated at different points along the national territory. These cables include the Pan-American (PanAm) cable through Arica, the South America-1 (SAm-1) cable through Arica and Valparaíso, the South American Crossing (SAC)/Latin American Nautilus (LAN) cable through Valparaíso, the Google Curie cable through Valparaíso, and the Cable Mistral through Arica and Valparaíso.

The technical regulation of the Internet in Chile falls under the purview of the Chilean Ministry of Transport and Telecommunications, which operates through the Undersecretariat of Telecommunications (Subtel). Additionally, the country code top-level domain for Chile is .cl, and its administration is managed by the Universidad de Chile through NIC Chile.[3]

History

Initial attempts and Cybersyn

Before the introduction of the internet in Chile, the country communicated abroad via Letters, the Correos de Chile service had been started by Chile in 1747 (when it was still part of the Spanish crown)[4] it was not until 1851 that a telegraphy service began for communication with the outside world, initially in 1851 wired and officially wireless since 1904[5] (with a certain role being played by the Vía Trans Radio Chilena Compañía de Radiotelegrafía, which would become later in VTR), later communication with the outside arose via Telephone -whose implementation had begun in Valparaíso in 1878 by Compañía Chilena de Telefonos de Edison -which in 1930 would become the Compañía Telefónica de Chile-

Perhaps the closest previous experience to the contemporary internet was the development of Cybersyn, in 1970 the world was experiencing the Cold War and Chile was led by a government that sought to establish a socialist state , After nationalizing and annexing various socially owned companies to the State, the Allende government's economic system faced the need to coordinate information on existing state-owned companies and those recently nationalized. To achieve this, it was necessary to create a dynamic and flexible information transfer system, a task carried out by a British scientist the architect of systems Stafford Beer.[6]

The teletypes were telegraph devices for data transmission, with which the Government of Salvador Allende intended to coordinate information from recently expropriated companies with the central government.

Since there were 500 unused teletypes, all of them acquired during the government of Eduardo Frei Montalva, each one of the machines was installed in an expropriated factory. At the control center in Santiago, a computer daily processed the information received from the factories. By processing such information, short-term predictions and recommendations for improvements were obtained. There were four levels of control (company, branch, sector and total) that had algedonic feedback (if the lower level of control could not solve a problem in a given time interval, the higher level was notified about it). The results were discussed in the operating room and an overall plan was drawn up.[7]

The network was built between November 1971 and the same month of 1972, although it was never fully completed. The system was used experimentally in October 1972, during the October 1972 strike, when 50 000 unemployed truckers blocked the streets of Santiago. Using teletype machines, the government was able to coordinate the transport of food to the city with the approximately 200 trucks loyal to Allende and who were not unemployed.[8]

With the 1973 Chilean coup d'état, the control center was destroyed, documents and existing telephone and teletype infrastructure were destroyed, Cybersyn could never be applied and was irrevocably aborted, additionally with the change of Cold War bloc by the Government Junta of Chile (1973) – which advocated a free market- a network that running a Self-managed economy made no sense.

The university network

The Novation CAT acoustically coupled modem

The Internet in Chile -as we know it- dates back to the ARPANET project, in 1972 the universities of the United States copied the ARPANET model and implemented it to exchange opinions among themselves and support themselves in their academic research, however, This development was not copied in Chile, only in 1986, from the Department of Computer Science of the University of Chile to the Department of Computer Engineering of the University of Santiago de Chile, through a UUCP platform, some tests were carried out. and mailings between said universities using 300-bit modems and the CTC telephone line (which at that time had national coverage), imitating a sort of Intranet model.[9]

It was not until 1987 when Dr. Florencio Utreras (of the Universidad de Chile) connected the country with BITNET, which was an academic network of the City University of New York and Yale University, giving rise to the Internet. in Chile.[10]

Subsequently, the University of Santiago abandoned the collaboration and joined the Pontificia Universidad Católica (PUC).[11] In its beginnings, the Internet worked between local universities and with some universities abroad using modems and pre-existing telephone lines of the only telephone company in Chile -which had a monopoly-. The domain .cl was given in 1986 to the Department of Computer Sciences (DCC) of the University of Chile and later began to be managed by NIC Chile, beginning to be commercialized only in the year 1997.[12]

The commercialization of 56k and ADSL

Wizard for Entel 56k Connection during the 1990s

Only in 1993 did the commercialization of the Internet begin in Chile, the then CTC (Compañía de Telefonos de Chile) acquired the technology from the University of Chile, while the technology from the Catholic University of Chile passed by various private owners until today it became Claro Chile.[13]

The then CTC (Compañía de Telefonos de Chile) using its existing telephone network, launched in 1993 the service of Dial-up Internet access -with maximum speeds of 56 Kilobit per second-, which had some peculiarities, it was not possible to use the telephone line and navigate at the same time, there was no local connection, so traffic between users of both networks had to navigate to US and return and the service was billed per second of access and as international long distance, which made the service exclusive to a large part of the population.[14]

Additionally, the majority of the population did not see the Internet as very useful, outside of the academic environment, there was no interest in the Internet in Chilean society.[15]

During the 1990s, telephone companies and long-distance carriers began to offer Internet connection services to the mass public.

The massiveness of the Internet in Chile began in 1997 and is essentially due to the creation of NAP Chile and a decree of the Chilean Government, which changed the form of Internet billing, which allowed between 1998 and 1999 to increase both Internet users, which tripled; as well as the number of minutes they used per month.[16]

ADSL router like the ones Telefónica Chile used during the 2000s

In 1997 several Chilean ISPs associated to form a local traffic exchange point, called NAP Chile, which allowed us to improve both the traffic latency and the costs of its associated ISPs.[17]

In May 1999, the Chilean government decreed a change in the rates for those who access the Internet using telephone connections, a charging formula called "Local Tranche" would be used. The impact on the cost of use is direct for users, having a 62% decrease compared to the previous year.[18]

One of the main access barriers that the Internet service had in Chile was its charge per second of connection, it was towards the beginning of the year 2000, when Entel Chile and Telefónica Chile began to incorporate in their Existing telephone networks technology ADSL, fixed charge connections but at private prices for a large part of the population, with this Broadband was born, being able to have high speed was radically changing the impact of the Internet and its possible uses.[19]

The development of the HFC network and 3G

The Cablemodem connection is the most common way to access the Internet today.

Around 1996, almost all of the internet in Chile was by Dial-up Internet access, however, a cable television company -Metrópolis (Chile)- on 17 October 1996, put into operation an interactive video game channel called Sega Channel, which allowed the download of content by the company Sega, this being the first Internet experience on the infrastructure of cable television, in 1999, VTR (Chile) launched Internet commercialization under its existing cable television network via the DOCSIS 1.0 standard and under independent connections of the telephone network, at high speed and with differentiated payments not for the amount of time used, conditions that do not offered the Dial-up Internet access.,[20] and that today are the norm for all home internet providers.[21]

However, the infrastructure and access to the Internet via cable modem, was rather modest in its early years, it was only after 2004 when Internet access via Hybrid fiber-coaxial began to become widespread, granting with a commercial strategy of VTR the launch of its best-known promotion: the Triple Pack -which lowered the cost of contracting telephony, television and internet as a whole- and the merger of VTR with Metrópolis Intercom S.A.[22]

In 2002, the first third-generation networks began to be implemented thanks to the different agreements made abroad by SmartCom and Bellsouth, which allowed them to sell 1xRTT equipment capable of browsing at 150 kbit/s, with which the debut of the Mobile broadband, which would only begin to spread in the 2010s, with the increase in the issuance of a contract (postpaid), to the detriment of communication through recharges (prepaid), in 2013 the 4G and in 2022, 5G.[23]

The development of the FTTH and satellite network

Analysts agree that globalization and the Free Trade Agreements that Chile has signed since the 1990s have made the Internet more widespread in Chile and have put in the world arena[24]

The development of the Internet in Chile until 2006, was based on the conversion and reuse of two previously existing technologies in Chile, on the one hand, the Telephone line of the Compañía de Telefonos de Chile -which in some sectors it dated back to 1880–, via Digital subscriber line technology and on the other hand the cable television network of VTR -which in some sectors dating back to 1987–, via Hybrid fiber-coaxial technology, both had wide coverage in the national territory, but also had important technical limitations -especially the Telephone line- in terms of speed, latency and state of the cabling (causing the rapid decline of xDSL networks from 2015 to the present).[25]

The fiber to the home infrastructure only started in 2006 and is still geographically limited.

Although internet providers via cable television infrastructure began to incorporate new DOCSIS standards and internet providers via Telephone line infrastructure progressively implemented ADSL2 and VDSL2, it was not until 2006 that the company Gtd began the deployment of a new infrastructure to provide internet, based on fiber to the home, initially, the infrastructure was deployed in sectors residential upper class and with limited geographical coverage, later in 2012 Movistar began the deployment of its new infrastructure of fiber to the home -with special massiveness of deployment since 2020–, to which Mundo and Entel joined in 2020, WOM in 2019 and VTR in 2021, these last three, with limited geographical coverage.[26]

Residential Satellite Internet in Chile is a rather limited phenomenon, most of its consumers are part of the economic development of the Rural area, the domestic Rural area uses mostly Mobile broadband, since 2014, Movistar markets Satellite Broadband,[27] to which would be added the following year Claro Chile,[28] in 2020 Hughes Communications would begin its commercialization, to which would be added the following year Starlink.[29] As of December 2021, it reported more than 1,500 clients.[30]

Contemporary Internet

Access to satellite internet in Chile is rather marginal, it is used mainly by the productive system of the Rural area.

Since 1999, the Government of Chile has incorporated a successive process of digitalization of its services. In 1999, the Servicio de Impuestos Internos, the government entity in charge of collecting taxes, received almost 90,000 declarations of income through the Internet, of the million total income statements for that year.,[31] since the 2010s, a significant number of government procedures have been digitized, in addition to a progressive adoption of the Online banking and Electronic Commerce, coinciding with an accelerated globalization process in Chile from the years 2000.[32]

Analysts point out that a huge percentage of Chilean GDP has grown thanks to the Internet. Mining, agriculture and all traditional companies have been affected by their growth thanks to the Internet. The Internet has freed Chile from its isolated geography and has allowed Chile to insert itself into the world efficiently.[33]

The main internet infrastructure test Chile has experienced was the 2010 Chile Earthquake, which left a massive internet outage and much network infrastructure destroyed -Including a flood of Global Crossing servers-[34]

However, the main agent of change of the Contemporary Internet in Chile was the COVID-19 Pandemic, which caused an increase in Internet consumption in Chile that was reflected in the first months of the pandemic, where it was reported that the use of social networks increased by 53% compared to the same month of the previous year, above several other countries in the region.[35]

Movistar 4G and 5G mobile repeater antenna, installed in the places damaged by the fire.

Data consumption per user reached 335.5 GB on fixed internet in April 2020, 29.4% more than the previous year. Regarding mobile internet consumption, it increased 26% to 13 Gigabytes in the same period, a situation even more accentuated with the COVID-19 lockdowns, where the network was exposed to intensive use, forcing operators to strengthen their existing infrastructure and society and the Government of Chile to digitize many of its benefits, emerging massively Teleworking, Telemedicine, Distance Education, Online banking absolutely, the Judiciary of Chile remotely, the Streaming and other services that are maintained to date.[36]

For the 2024 Chile wildfires in the Valparaíso region, due to the fire, telephone antennas were destroyed, as well as satellite backup systems and several kilometers of trunk and domestic fiber cabling, which added to the power outage widespread due to damage from fires and an unprecedented overload of the fixed and mobile network [37] caused that around 7 p.m. on February 2, 2023, all of Viña del Mar and Quilpué experienced a "blackout" of fixed and mobile internet from all companies, leaving IP Telephony and Transbank out of service (and with this out of service the processing of payment transactions with credit cards, debit banking and prepaid), although internet companies quickly activated National Emergency Automatic Roaming (RAN) (which is essentially automatically sharing their antennas, making communication redundant in case of failure at some point) and portable satellite teleports for the use of Chilean Armed Forces, Carabineros de Chile, Investigations Police of Chile, Firefighters of Chile and the emergency health services, domestic connectivity took several weeks to return to normal. integrity. [38]

Legal regulation

Legally since 2010, ISPs have a prohibition on blocking, interference, discrimination, hindering and arbitrary restriction of the activities of Internet users, the network being neutral.

The control and supervision in the exercise of telecommunications in the country and of the Internet, in Chile is in charge of the Undersecretary of Telecommunications of Chile (also known by its acronym Subtel)[39] reports to the Chilean Ministry of Transport and Telecommunications (MTT).

The main Internet legislation in Chile is the Chilean General Telecommunications Law 18,168, enacted in 1982.[40]

In addition to Chile's General Telecommunications Law 18,168, there are various legal bodies that regulate specific aspects of Internet access:

Network neutrality

On 13 June 2010, the National Congress of Chile amended its telecommunications law to preserve network neutrality, becoming the first country in the world to do so.[41][42][43] The law, published on 26 August 2010, added three articles to the General Law of Telecommunications, forbidding ISPs from arbitrarily blocking, interfering with, discriminating, hindering or restricting an Internet user's right to use, send, receive or offer any legal content, application, service or any other type of legal activity or use through the Internet. ISPs must offer Internet access in which content is not arbitrarily treated differently based on its source or ownership.[44]

Indicators and use

Search, Watch Videos, Social Networks, Electronic banking and Pornography are the main uses of the Internet in Chile.[45]

Penetration

Participation of web traffic by device

Consumption of goods through e-commerce

Most visited websites

Bandwidth

Distribution of speeds with fixed connections:[49]

Distribution of mobile accesses in the country by technology:[50]

Malicious traffic

According to the State of the Internet report for the last quarter of 2018, Chile ranked 68th in generating the most attack traffic worldwide.[51]

Technical aspects

At a technical level, the .cl domain allows some additional features: it allows internationalized domain names (IDN), IPv6 traffic and security authentication for the domain names (DNSSEC). In addition, there are currently 12 Root Servers mirrors in Chile: there are instances of servers D, E, F, J, K and L in Santiago,[52] an instance of the server L in Concepción and copies of the roots B,D and E in Arica. The instance of B Root Server hosted in Arica is the first copy of this letter hosted outside the United States and currently (June 2019) serves IPv4 traffic and IPv6 for all countries in the world.[53] Root servers B, D, E, J and K are hosted by PIT CHILE.[54]

Internet infrastructure

International connection infrastructure

Pan-American Cable, the main Internet connection route in Chile with the rest of the world

International submarine cables

The international submarine cables that are active in the first semester of 2021 are:[55]

Satellite teleports

In addition to the aforementioned cables, the connection abroad is complemented by Satellite Internet through the following teleports:

Local connection infrastructure

National submarine cables

There are also national submarine cables that provide connectivity between cities:[61]

In addition to these cables, the connection to the Magallanes Region was primarily through a mixed fiber optic and microwave connection that has operated throughout Argentina since 2005[62] until the entry into service of the Austral Fiber Optic.

Traffic exchange points

With the creation of NAP Chile, in 1997, the first traffic exchange point (PIT) was inaugurated in Chile, to which several small operators connect. Until that minute all traffic was going to the US.

In 1999, Subtel issues a circular detailing the technical requirements that PITs must have, seeking to promote local traffic exchange.[63][64] As a result, multiple PITs are generated that are connected to several others, promoting the direct local exchange of traffic between operators and the reduction of cost and latency for users.

These PITs also begin to connect various content delivery networks which further improves the perception of users.

As of January 2022, Subtel recognizes 10 traffic exchange points.[65]

Domestic infrastructure

Wired infrastructure

Wireless infrastructure

References

  1. ^ "Design Liberty, Regulate A Nation. Cybernetic Socialism In The Chile Of Salvador Allende".
  2. ^ "DStatus of the Internet connection in Chile: 90.2% of the population already accesses the Internet".
  3. ^ "Chile". CIA The World Factbook. Retrieved 26 December 2011.
  4. ^ "A walk through the history of telephony in Chile [Review]".
  5. ^ "This Chilean created the first wireless telegraph in America, and no one remembers him anymore".
  6. ^ "Design Liberty, Regulate A Nation. Cybernetic Socialism In The Chile Of Salvador Allende".
  7. ^ "Design Liberty, Regulate A Nation. Cybernetic Socialism In The Chile Of Salvador Allende".
  8. ^ "Design Liberty, Regulate A Nation. Cybernetic Socialism In The Chile Of Salvador Allende".
  9. ^ "Know the History and Evolution of the Internet in Chile".
  10. ^ "Know the History and Evolution of the Internet in Chile".
  11. ^ "La Verdadera y Real Historia de Internet en Chile". Retrieved 19 July 2023.
  12. ^ "Universidad de Chile – History of the Department of Computer Science".
  13. ^ "The History of the Internet in Chile" (PDF).
  14. ^ "The History of the Internet in Chile" (PDF).
  15. ^ "Banda Ancha en Chile: Cómo el país pasó a convertirse en el líder regional en Internet". Retrieved 19 July 2023.[permanent dead link]
  16. ^ "The Internet in Chile: 1999 Was a Good Year". Archived from the original on 6 September 2017. Retrieved 19 July 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  17. ^ "NAP Chile".[permanent dead link]
  18. ^ "The Internet in Chile: 1999 Was a Good Year". Archived from the original on 6 September 2017. Retrieved 19 July 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  19. ^ "Historia de Internet en Chile: nacimiento y evolución del sector online en nuestro país". Retrieved 19 July 2023.
  20. ^ "Canal 15 #03: Censuras, batallas comerciales y además Fútbol. La TV Cerrada en Chile: 1987–1998". YouTube. Retrieved 19 July 2023.
  21. ^ "Banda Ancha en Chile: Cómo el país pasó a convertirse en el líder regional en Internet". Retrieved 19 July 2023.[permanent dead link]
  22. ^ "Banda Ancha en Chile: Cómo el país pasó a convertirse en el líder regional en Internet". Retrieved 19 July 2023.[permanent dead link]
  23. ^ "(035) De AMPS a 3G: la evolución de las redes en Chile". Retrieved 19 July 2023.
  24. ^ "Banda Ancha en Chile: Cómo el país pasó a convertirse en el líder regional en Internet". Retrieved 19 July 2023.
  25. ^ "Banda Ancha en Chile: Cómo el país pasó a convertirse en el líder regional en Internet". Retrieved 19 July 2023.[permanent dead link]
  26. ^ "Banda Ancha en Chile: Cómo el país pasó a convertirse en el líder regional en Internet". Retrieved 19 July 2023.[permanent dead link]
  27. ^ "Join the Satellite Broadband revolution". YouTube.
  28. ^ "Satelital Internet".
  29. ^ "Starlink, Elon Musk's satellite internet, begins to operate commercially in Chile".
  30. ^ "Internet satelital Starlink, empresa de Elon Musk, tiene más de 1.500 clientes en Chile". Retrieved 19 July 2023.
  31. ^ "Balance Operación Renta 1999". Retrieved 19 July 2023.
  32. ^ "Banda Ancha en Chile: Cómo el país pasó a convertirse en el líder regional en Internet". Retrieved 19 July 2023.[permanent dead link]
  33. ^ "Banda Ancha en Chile: Cómo el país pasó a convertirse en el líder regional en Internet". Retrieved 19 July 2023.[permanent dead link]
  34. ^ "El día en que la tecnología apagó a Chile". Retrieved 19 July 2023.
  35. ^ "El uso de redes sociales en tiempos de cuarentena en América Latina". Retrieved 19 July 2023.
  36. ^ "Tráfico total de Internet fija y móvil crece 40% a marzo de 2020 impulsado por la pandemia de COVID-19". Retrieved 19 July 2023.
  37. ^ "Megafires in the Valparaíso Region: companies make progress in replenishing electricity supply and telecommunications services". Retrieved 10 March 2024.
  38. ^ "A huge forest fire is reported between Viña del Mar and Quilpué". Retrieved 10 March 2024.
  39. ^ "Subtel inicia investigación por supuesta interrupción de 5G a cable operadores". Radio Biobío. 3 February 2022. Retrieved 26 February 2022.
  40. ^ "LEY GENERAL DE TELECOMUNICACIONES". Retrieved 17 July 2023.
  41. ^ "Net neutrality enshrined in Dutch law". The Guardian. London. Associated Press. 23 June 2011. Retrieved 23 June 2011.
  42. ^ "Chile publica su ley que garantiza la neutralidad de la Red | Navegante". El Mundo. Spain. Retrieved 23 June 2011.
  43. ^ "¿Quién quiere acabar con la neutralidad en la Red?". EL PAÍS. Retrieved 14 September 2014.
  44. ^ "Law 20,453". Retrieved 14 September 2014.
  45. ^ "Estado de la conexión a internet en Chile: 90,2% de la población ya ingresa a internet". Retrieved 18 July 2023.
  46. ^ "Estado de la conexión a internet en Chile: 90,2% de la población ya ingresa a internet". Retrieved 18 July 2023.
  47. ^ "Estado de la conexión a internet en Chile: 90,2% de la población ya ingresa a internet". Retrieved 6 August 2023.
  48. ^ World Economic Forum. "The Global Information Technology Report 2016" (PDF). Retrieved 16 April 2017.
  49. ^ Subtel. "Series conexiones internet fija (Período Información Primer Trimestre 2002 – Diciembre 2020)" (xlsx). Retrieved 24 June 2021. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  50. ^ Subtel. "Series conexiones internet móvil (Período Información Primer Trimestre 2002 – Junio 2021)" (xls). Retrieved 12 December 2021.
  51. ^ Akamai (2018). "Web attacks and gaming abuse – [State of the Internet]/Security" (PDF). 5 (3). Retrieved 15 July 2019. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  52. ^ 2x3.cl (17 February 2017). "Servidores raiz mirrors en Chile". 2x3.cl. Retrieved 8 December 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  53. ^ "B Root Server Inicia su operación En Arica".
  54. ^ Pitchile.cl. "Sobre Pit Chile". Retrieved 6 June 2019.
  55. ^ Telegeography.com. "Submarine Cable Landing Directory". Archived from the original on 29 May 2012. Retrieved 29 May 2012.
  56. ^ Olave, Ricardo (24 July 2021). "Mistral: el nuevo cable submarino que conecta a Chile con el mundo". latercera.com. Retrieved 11 December 2021.
  57. ^ Entel. "Entel- Telepuerto satelital". entel.cl. Archived from the original on 19 April 2017. Retrieved 18 April 2017.
  58. ^ "Nuevo servicio de banda ancha satelital". Retrieved 18 April 2017.
  59. ^ "Hughes Network Systems, Hughes de Chile SpA" (PDF). Retrieved 22 June 2022.
  60. ^ "Empresa alemana instalará fibra óptica submarina para optimizar conectividad virtual de Aysén". El Divisadero. 13 February 2014. Retrieved 14 May 2019.
  61. ^ Fajardo, Daniel (27 October 2005). "Banda ancha en Punta Arenas: La nueva conexión para el Fin del Mundo". emol.com. Archived from the original on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 5 August 2015.
  62. ^ "About NAP".
  63. ^ "Acerca de NAP". Retrieved 1 March 2016.
  64. ^ "Normativa Técnica Internet".
  65. ^ "Estadísticas SUBTEL: Conexiones de Fibra Óptica crecen un 62% al cierre del 2020". Retrieved 19 July 2023.
  66. ^ "Estadísticas SUBTEL: Conexiones de Fibra Óptica crecen un 62% al cierre del 2020". Retrieved 19 July 2023.
  67. ^ Subtel (2021). "Series conexiones internet fija (Período Información Primer Trimestre 2002 – Junio 2021)" (xls). Retrieved 11 December 2021.
  68. ^ "Estadísticas SUBTEL: Conexiones de Fibra Óptica crecen un 62% al cierre del 2020". Retrieved 19 July 2023.
  69. ^ Subtel. "Comparador de Planes". Archived from the original on 12 May 2012. Retrieved 22 May 2012.
  70. ^ "Starlink, el internet satelital de Elon Musk, comienza a operar comercialmente en Chile". cnn.com. 20 October 2021. Retrieved 11 December 2021.
  71. ^ "Internet satelital Starlink, empresa de Elon Musk, tiene más de 1.500 clientes en Chile". cooperativa.cl. 12 December 2021. Retrieved 16 December 2021.
  72. ^ Telegeography.com (26 September 2006). "Entel launches Chile's first commercial WiMAX network". Archived from the original on 16 October 2014. Retrieved 29 May 2012.