AT&T recently announced that 11 new metro areas will be getting options for fiber internet access. The company is on track to reach 45 metros total by the end of 2016.
By Conner Forrest | October 7, 2016, 12:33 PM PST
AT&T will bring its gigabit internet service to 11 more metro areas in the US, the company announced on Tuesday. According to a press release, the expansion is part of a newly-created umbrella brand called AT&T Fiber, which will explore new technologies for internet connectivity.
"Customer demand for high-speed connectivity is exceeding even our high expectations. Today we're also introducing the AT&T Fiber umbrella brand, which lets us bring ultra-fast internet to even more residential and business customers through a mix of the latest network technologies," David Christopher, CMO of the AT&T Entertainment Group, said in the press release.
Under the new AT&T Fiber brand, AT&T GigaPower will be rebranded as AT&T Internet 1000.
Currently, AT&T offers fiber internet service in 29 US metro areas. The additional 11 will bring the total number to 40, but AT&T said in the press release that they are targeting deployment in 45 total metro areas by the end of 2016. They also said they are planning to hit at least 67 in total sometime in the future.
To see what metro areas are available now, and which areas AT&T currently has underway, check out this map. In terms of the recent expansion, AT&T is targeting the following 11 areas:
Florida: Gainesville and Panama City
Georgia: Columbus
Kentucky: Central Kentucky
Louisiana: Lafayette
Mississippi: Biloxi-Gulfport and Northeast Mississippi
North Carolina: Wilmington
Tennessee: Southeastern Tennessee and Knoxville
Texas: Corpus Christi
AT&T said in its press release that it had planned to be in 12.5 million total locations by
Along with Verizon Fios and Google Fiber, AT&T is one of the biggest competitors in the fiber internet market. However, Verizon Fios claims coverage in only 12 US cities, and while Google Fiber had expanded rapidly for a while, it wasrecently reported that the company was cutting jobs amid poor adoption rates.
However, there is another reason why AT&T is aggressively expanding its fiber network—it was ordered to do so by the government. When AT&T purchased DirecTV back in the summer of 2015, the FCC set requirements that AT&T had to build out a fiber network to provide high-speed internet connection to at least 12.5 million people within four years. The idea was that it would increase competition among internet providers and (assumedly) would make it easier for cord cutters in areas where AT&T and DirecTV would no longer be competing.
Regardless of the motivations behind it, AT&T is on track to become the largest fiber internet provider in the US. And, if the market matures and adoption increases, AT&T will be in a strong position as one of the top providers in the country.
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