George Frey/Reuters
Oklahoma's Oklahoma City, as well as Florida's Jacksonville and Tampa areas, will all be invited to try out Google Fiber.
Just last month, the company invited three other cities: Louisville, Kentucky; Irvine, California; and San Diego, California.
After it makes plans with these three new cities, Google will decide whether or not it will introduce Google Fiber to those cities. Google considers customers as well as the existing infrastructure when it decides on a new Google Fiber city.
Google says it picked out Florida's two cities due to Jacksonville's title as a top 10 city for tech jobs, and Tampa Bay's #2 spot on the list of best cities for young entrepreneurs. Google noted that Oklahoma City is recognized as the top city to launch a business.
"One of our goals is to make sure speed isn't an accidental ceiling for how people and businesses use the Web, and these cities are the perfect places to show what's possible with gigabit Internet."
As it does with every other city, Google will work with local leaders from these three new cities to help lay the groundwork for construction, since every city has different infrastructure.
Currently, there are 15 metro areas in the US that support Google Fiber.