Posted on 03/01/2015 2:37:18 PM PST by Kartographer
Computers, cellphones and landlines in Arizona were knocked out of service for hours, ATMs stopped working, 911 systems were disrupted and businesses were unable to process credit-card transactions all because vandals sliced through a fiber-optic Internet cable buried in the rocky desert. The Internet outage did more than underscore just how dependent modern society has become on high technology.
(Excerpt) Read more at tulsaworld.com ...
Your other (dupe) copy of this thread got pulled, but that was the one with the list ping. You might want to re-ping the list, since the ping doesn't work.
Thanks, Dayglored
Just another reason why the government needs to control the internet...for security reasons/s
Does anyone know if the vandals were praising Allah while doing their dirty work?
Vandalism in Arizona shows the Internet's vulnerability
Bah! That ain't nothin'. You want to cause trouble, knock over one of the DNS root servers.
(No, don't. Really.)
The cable that was severed isnt hard to spot because the trenching machines used to bury it leave a scar on the landscape, he said.This should be a Big Freakin' Deal because it flies in the face of one of the most basic principles of the design of the Internet -- that there is always an alternate data route. The only exception is "last-mile" connections to residential and business customers.I could take a couple of shovels, and one or two people, a six-pack of beer, find a place thats hidden with not much traffic, and I could have a little party, Hobbs said. It would be a trivial task to dig up one of these cables. Theyre not guarded, and theyre not protected.
Hobbs said CenturyLink should be discussing why the lines werent backed up and whether there are enough alternative routes for data. People should be embarrassed that this has happened and that they hadnt planned for a better outcome, he said.
WTH were these people thinking???
Currently I have a team lead who worked for 40 years or so for AZ telcos from Mountain Bell through Quest. He remembers when the copper that served all of South AZ at the time, also out of Phoenix Main, was backhoed during a construction project. Some highly placed people lost their jobs over that one. Wonder whose heads will roll over this?
bttt
what happened to redundant fiber rings....thing of the past,to expensive,myth?
Why dig there are loads in the air
This is from the Tulsa World. I remember a few years back when someone with a chainsaw wrecked havoc on a Tulsa telephone underground cubicle. It was a mess for quite a while.
The consideration of the companies that provide internet infrastructure is the basic relationship of telecommunications economics: "If arpu << opex telco goes broke." Translation: If the average revenue per user is less that the operational expense of the network YOUR telecom company WILL go broke.
This is more of a problem in the Mountain West than in most places. Population densities drop off quick outside the major cities and distances are long. This means low revenues and high infrastructure costs. Which means that you can have all of the layer 2-7 redundancy you want but if there is only one fiber run from Phoenix to Flagstaff and some guy gets loose with a shovel and a pair of bolt cutters, you're screwed. And you aren't going to guard all 150 miles of fiber run.
Running fiber is the expensive part. For Flagstaff, the reasonable thing to do would be to run fiber from Phoenix Main up highway 87 all the way to Winslow and then backhaul it along the rail lines to Flagstaff - assuming there isn't already fiber there, which is probable. The problem is, every Green in the State of Arizona will be fighting you every foot of the way for 200 miles and you will have to cross the land of the Tonto Apache - and if you think their warriors were fierce in the 19th century you ought to see their lawyers in the 21st. Big casino revenues buys good lawyers. (I think that's an Apache saying, don't know how old.) There will be a price to be paid. So the question is, is it worth having a redundant path between Phoenix and Flagstaff? The I17 corridor is growing but I doubt the revenues would support the necessary infrastructure investment at this time.
Excellent post. Thanks for your erudite explanation.
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