Weaker souls had taken off when the rain began to fall, but the stalwarts along the wrought-iron fence weren’t going anywhere. They had come to this corner among the faded manses of pre-revolutionary sugar barons and mafiosi to taste one of the rarest commodities in Cuba — the internet — at one of the wireless hotspots the government set up a few weeks before. They weren’t going to let a little signal outage, or a rainstorm, stop them from trying to get online.
I went down to a seaside neighborhood on the outskirts of the capital to see how this worked. A paquete distributor in his late 20s, who works as a researcher in a state medical lab, greeted me on the front porch of the one-story home he shares with his parents. The deal is simple: each week he pays $5 to download the paquete onto his portable hard drive from a distributor higher up the chain, then he charges $1 to 20 or so regular customers to download from him.