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Start-up pushes global wireless network-sharing

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With US$21.7m fund, FON is changing where and how people access internet

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A Spanish start-up with financial backing from two of the world's hippest technology firms has a grand plan to change where and how people access the internet - and it is relying on a global community of grassroots activists to accomplish that.

FON is the brainchild of telecommunications entrepreneur Martin Varsavsky and seeks to create a global wireless network from Wi-fi hotspots owned by the company's growing number of 'Foneros' - FON members who make their wireless connection available to other users for free or for a small cost, say, US$2 per day.

The idea has its roots in the file and resource-sharing movement underlying the popularity of peer-to-peer networks. Just as peer-to-peer technology is increasingly used in legitimate businesses, so has FON's commercial potential attracted the attention of major industry players.

Google and eBay-owned internet telephony company Skype and venture capitalists Index and Sequoia Capital invested US$21.7 million in the business in February.

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That funding brought FON some welcome attention and the number of registered global Foneros now stands at 64,571.

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