Google could significantly improve the loading speed of web pages with the help of proxy servers

  Opera or Amazon have developed systems that, through proxy servers, reduce the size of websites and deliver optimized pages to the mobile terminals that use them to browse the web. These systems are extremely useful for users who have not very fast web connections, and Google could enter the same game. Android version a Google Chrome has implemented a data compression function accessed by web browsers, the company's engineers are currently testing the entire functionality.

Reduce data consumption by loading optimized web pages via Google proxy servers.

  This is the description used by Google for the function implemented in Chromium, an open source beta version of Google Chrome, in that version of the browser, new functions of the browser are often implemented. Google would use its SPDY servers to make browsing the web much faster using Google Chrome, but for now no one knows when this functionality will arrive in Android OS or iOS.

Google's implementation would be different in that it would use the company's SPDY proxy servers. SPDY, which is not an acronym but just a short version for the word "speedy," is a protocol developed primarily at Google to improve browsing by forcing SSL encryption for all sites and speeding up page loads. It does the latter via multiplexing (sending multiple streams of data over a single network connection), assigning high or low priorities to page resources being requested from a server, and compressing header information that accompanies communications for resource requests and responses. In other words, it's part of Google's broader strategy to speed up the Web.