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BBC reports Kenya fiber break
- Subject: BBC reports Kenya fiber break
- From: smb at cs.columbia.edu (Steven Bellovin)
- Date: Thu, 1 Mar 2012 12:59:45 -0500
- In-reply-to: <CAJNg7VKUeah+KsqF-Zd9sgC9HGh=D=urun3LyNHmsO-x5=0=Og@mail.gmail.com>
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On Feb 29, 2012, at 11:17 17AM, Marshall Eubanks wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 29, 2012 at 10:08 AM, Justin M. Streiner
> <streiner at cluebyfour.org> wrote:
>> On Wed, 29 Feb 2012, Rodrick Brown wrote:
>>
>>> There's about 1/2 a dozen or so known private and government research
>>> facilities on Antarctica and I'm surprised to see no fiber end points on
>>> that continent? This can't be true.
>>
>>
>> Constantly shifting ice shelves and glaciers make a terrestrial cable
>> landing very difficult to implement on Antarctica. Satellite connectivity
>> is likely the only feasible option. There are very few places in
>> Antarctica that are reliably ice-free enough of the time to make a viable
>> terrestrial landing station. Getting connectivity from the landing station
>> to other places on the continent is another matter altogether.
>
> Apparently at least one long fiber pull has been contemplated.
>
> http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/sci/tech/2207259.stm
>
> (Note : the headline is incorrect - the Internet reached the South Pole in 1994,
> via satellite, of course :
> http://www.southpolestation.com/trivia/90s/ftp1.html )
>
> As far as I can tell, this was never done, and the South Pole gets its
> Internet mostly via
> TDRSS.
>
> http://www.usap.gov/technology/contentHandler.cfm?id=1971
Yes. I had discussions with some of their network support folks circa 1994 -- with
limited bandwidth (DS0, as I recall) and only a few hours of connectivity per day,
when a satellite was over the horizon, they were very concerned about attackers
clogging their link.
--Steve Bellovin, https://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb