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The Internet is Crashing!!

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  • The Internet is Crashing!!



    from the Drudge Report:

    Is the internet going down? Undersea sub-cables have just broken...


    Breaking news: something's happening to the internet, right now. We're just not quite sure what.

    Interoute, the internet networks company, reports that three of the four internet sub-cables that run from Asia to North America have been damaged.

    These carry more than 75 per cent of traffic between the Middle East, Europe and America. It's hard to gather what this actually means - is it that the internet is down or (more likely) significantly slower than usual between the Middle East and America? (If you're reading this, let's face it, the internet has not shut down altogether)

    But, according to the company, there is a domino effect taking place. Interoute says it is:

    hearing that offices have lost their entire private network connectivity. As a result, users are unable to do their daily job over the internet and are turning to their mobile phones to communicate across the globe. This is having a knock on effect on the domestic voice networks, which are getting a surge of calls needing to be routed internationally. These calls need to be routed onto international gateways that pass voice traffic in longer directions around the world to avoid the cable breaks – causing more quality issues and risk more call failures, in turn causing more calls to be placed and increasing the pressure on local voice networks.

    What (I think) this means is that companies' private internet services have gone down. So, if they can get access, they have had to go on the public internet and mobile phones, like the rest of us average joes, to get their work done. That results in more strain on mobile phone networks, which means more phone calls go down and the internet becomes slower.

    Here's the big problem right now:

    Finance companies [are] looking to settle trades on European and American exchanges. This cable outage means there is no real-time access to, for example, trading ticker services. This means branch offices are compromised when trying to place trades. As private networks are being affected, these organisations are forced to rely on public internet services that may have more latency and may not update as quickly. The loss of time even precious seconds is hugely important to trading exchanges. These public internet services are now struggling to cope with peak in demand – leading to increased latency, and further compromising the integrity of the trading data.

    I'm told that these major sub-sea cables break once a year. So companies have developed a fall-back plan. If one sub-sea cable is out, traffic is re-routed onto a second cable. In theory, a dual break, where both cables go out at once, is incredibly rare. Prior to January this year, it had not happened before.

    The problem with all of this is that it's hard to see the impact, or its significance, until something disastrous happens. So, we're keeping an eye on it and like we said, er, something's happening to the internet.

  • #2
    CAIRO, Dec. 19 (Xinhua) -- Internet services in Egypt have been disrupted due to damage of undersea cables in the Mediterranean Sea, the Egyptian National Telecommunication Regulatory Authority said Friday.

    Up to 80 percent of Internet services and call centers in Egypt have been cut after the submarine cables were damaged south of Italy on Friday for unknown reason, said the Egyptian MENA news agency.

    The Egyptian side has contacted the international companies running the cables to give a repair report, MENA quoted an official source as saying, adding Internet services in Egypt is expected to improve in 12 hours.

    Earlier in the day, Egyptian Minister of Communications and Information Technology Tareq Kamel ordered to set up an operation room to follow up the repair works, which are carried out by an international marine cable repair company.

    Egypt is also trying to switch its Internet service to a backup route via southeast Asia and satellite.

    Egypt is constructing another undersea cable, namely TE-North, to connect the northern Egyptian port city of Alexandria and the southeastern French city of Marseille, said MENA.

    It is the second time in 2008 that Egypt witnessed a large scale Internet services cut due to submarine cable damage.

    In January, Internet services and international calls were also partly cut in Egypt, along with a number of countries in the Middle East and south Asia.

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    • #3
      You know if I were a terrorist, underseas cables would be the first thing I'd hit. Virtually no security in the way, and potential for a cascade disastrous chain-reaction consequences. Those guys really miss a lot of good opportunities.


      Edit: anyway WTF are you reading the Drudge Report for?
      Unbelievable!

      Comment


      • #4
        Go to bed already...
        So get your Naomi Klein books and move it or I'll seriously bash your faces in! - Supercitizen to stupid students
        Be kind to the nerdiest guy in school. He will be your boss when you've grown up!

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        • #5
          There's just ONE little problem with that.

          You have to GET UNDERSEA first. WAY, WAY under the sea. They don't exactly lay these cables at 50 feet or something.

          Then, how are you going to break them, exactly? Explosives function rather differently underwater...
          <Reverend> IRC is just multiplayer notepad.
          I like your SNOOPY POSTER! - While you Wait quote.

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          • #6
            That's what you get for using Explorer...

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by snoopy369
              There's just ONE little problem with that.

              You have to GET UNDERSEA first. WAY, WAY under the sea. They don't exactly lay these cables at 50 feet or something.

              Then, how are you going to break them, exactly? Explosives function rather differently underwater...
              I didn't suggest terrorists did it, only that they're stupid to not do it and to instead waste perfectly good resources suicidally shooting up a hotel or bombing a nightclub or whatever other crap that fades from the enemy's consciousness with each weekly news cycle.

              But as for the practical aspects, obviously you'd have to stick within a few miles of the coast if you only have scuba gear (though you don't necessarily have to be Bond-villain rich to buy or lease a remote-controlled submersible capable of going down several miles). As for the explosives, I fail to see how several shaped C-4 charges couldn't sever even the thickest fibreoptic cable with their shock wave well over 8000 ft/s, so long as they're placed directly on it so water doesn't absorb too much of the energy. AFAIK all explosives include their own oxidizing agent for efficiency (nitric acid usually), so the charge wouldn't need air to function, and the detonator needs no flame. I don't think I'm missing anything.
              Last edited by Darius871; December 19, 2008, 21:21.
              Unbelievable!

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              • #8
                Originally posted by snoopy369
                There's just ONE little problem with that.

                You have to GET UNDERSEA first. WAY, WAY under the sea. They don't exactly lay these cables at 50 feet or something.

                Then, how are you going to break them, exactly? Explosives function rather differently underwater...
                Well, just curious, but if the sea is something like 50 feet deep, I guess that cables are not that deeper.

                About expolsives underwater, yeah, they act differently - actually they are probably more effective since the "air" is a bit thicker
                With or without religion, you would have good people doing good things and evil people doing evil things. But for good people to do evil things, that takes religion.

                Steven Weinberg

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                • #9
                  Huh. I better PM you our contact info Zkrib.
                  Long time member @ Apolyton
                  Civilization player since the dawn of time

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