SpaceX has gone where most startups never have: To space. And it looks like Google may well want in on the excitement.
According to a report this morning from The Information (subscription required), Google is close to putting a substantial investment into Elon Musk’s rocket company at a valuation above $10 billion. The report cited several people close to the talks as its source.
“The purpose of a deal, which is still in the works,” The Information wrote, “is to support the development of SpaceX satellites that could beam low-cost Internet around the globe to billions who don’t have it.”
That plan jibes with a concept Musk unveiled on Friday: plans to deploy satellites that could connect millions of people around the world with a low-cost Internet.
Google, of course, has pursued initiatives of its own to bring Internet connectivity to people in under-served areas. Its Project Loon concept was designed to connect people via a system of balloons. Facebook, too, is working on a solution to the problem: On the one hand, it has backed Internet.org, a non-profit consortium that is building out connectivity infrastructure in the developing world. And on the other, Facebook’s Connectivity Lab is working on huge drones that could one day beam Internet service into areas that need it.
Neither Google nor SpaceX immediately responded to VentureBeat requests for comment.
SpaceX, of course, has been working on rockets designed to take satellites into space. Already, it has delivered a number of payloads to the International Space Station. Earlier this month, a SpaceX Dragon arrived at the Space Station. It was the fifth of 12 such missions under a $1.6 billion NASA contract. That successful mission was marred — to a certain extent — by the crash, and explosion, of SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket as it attempted to land on a platform at sea.
For Google, which has a market capitalization of $344.66 billion, an investment in the privately-held SpaceX could well provide it access to the technology — satellites, rockets, launch systems, and much more — that could help it further its mission to spread Internet connectivity around the world.
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