Elon Musk's Starlink satellite internet service has been approved in the UK, and people are already receiving their beta kits

Authored by businessinsider.com and submitted by Sumit316
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Elon Musk's Starlink satellite internet service has been approved by the UK regulator Ofcom.

Starlink, from Musk's aerospace company, SpaceX, will compete with the likes of BT Group and OneWeb to provide internet to people across the UK.

People in the UK have already started receiving the Starlink kit.

One user told Insider that he received his Starlink equipment on New Year's Eve and that his download speed jumped from 0.5 megabits per second to 85 Mbps.

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The UK has given the green light for SpaceX's Starlink satellite internet service, and users in the country have already received their kit for the company's public beta test.

Ofcom granted Elon Musk's aerospace company authorization for Starlink in November, a spokesman for the regulator told Insider on Monday. SpaceX began running a Starlink beta in the US in late 2020.

The UK license allows Starlink to compete against terrestrial internet providers such as BT Group and traditional satellite companies such as OneWeb, which was rescued from bankruptcy by the British government and the Indian telecoms firm Bharti Global in November.

People in the UK who signed up for SpaceX's "Better Than Nothing Beta" test have started receiving the Starlink kit, which costs £439, or about $600, up front, plus £84, or about $120, for a monthly subscription.

Philip Hall, in rural Devon, southwest England, told Insider on Friday that he received the router and terminal to connect to the satellites on New Year's Eve.

Hall had been getting download speeds of only 0.5 megabits per second with BT internet, he said. Now with Starlink, he's averaging 85 Mbps. "Within the hour we ran a Zoom quiz with grandchildren — it was wonderful," he said.

SpaceX said in an email to subscribers on October 26 that users participating in the beta test could expect speeds of 50 to 150 Mbps. Some US users have said they're getting download speeds of more than 210 Mbps.

Musk's goal for Starlink is to deliver superfast broadband internet around the world by enveloping the Earth with up to 42,000 satellites. SpaceX has so far launched at least 830 working Starlink satellites into orbit.

Read more: Here's how many millions of users Starlink may need to break even if it loses $2,000 for every satellite dish it sells, according to experts

OneWeb planned to launch 650 satellites into orbit by the end of 2020, a December mission briefing said. The space firm eventually wants to provide global internet coverage with up to 48,000 satellites, 6,000 more than what SpaceX has planned for its Starlink constellation.

Starlink started testing its beta service in North America and southern Canada in 2020. The UK isn't the only major market that SpaceX is entering — Greece, Germany, and Australia are said to have also approved the broadband service.

thorium43 on January 11st, 2021 at 16:15 UTC »

If your internet comes from space, what legal jurisdiction does the ISP need to comply with?

Or could Musk put the ISP in Switzerland like protonmail and give secure internet away from governments?

FilthyGrunger on January 11st, 2021 at 15:58 UTC »

Wish I could get this, I signed up but no word from them yet. The 250 KiB/s connection I use now is a joke.

esprit-de-lescalier on January 11st, 2021 at 15:14 UTC »

People in the UK who signed up for SpaceX's "Better Than Nothing Beta" test have started receiving the Starlink kit, which costs £439, or about $600, up front, plus £84, or about $120, for a monthly subscription.

Expensive, but if you are in a rural area with no alternative it's cheap. Plus the speeds are so fast you could likely share the connection, and the cost, with a neighbour via wifi