Drahtschneider: Wie die lebenswichtigen Unterwasserdatenkabel der Welt ins Visier genommen werden | Die gefährdeten Leitungen, über die 99 % der weltweiten internationalen Telekommunikation abgewickelt werden, ziehen schändliches Interesse auf sich

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/nov/22/wire-cutters-how-the-worlds-vital-undersea-data-cables-are-being-targeted

4 Comments

  1. It’s infrastructure.

    If another country was deliberately attacking your infrastructure, there’s already a protocol.

    We don’t need more laws or awareness, we need the people who are already aware of the laws being broken, to do their job.

    If you want to be a peach, communication along the way, would help build public trust and confidence.

    It is not hard, but nice people are *too* nice sometimes, to a fatal detriment.

  2. I think a lot of people really underestimate how vulnerable a lot of our tech infrastructure and even normal infrastructure are. Look at the last few years and all the attacks on power stations in the US. Those things aren’t protected at ALL from even simple vandalism, really. The only real protection they have is that people don’t want to mess them up since, well, they’re important. But all that goes out of the window if an outside force or one whose primary goal is chaos and destruction arrives. Will it hurt the people I hate more than it will hurt me? If so, let’s do it.

  3. Some of the more salient points below:

    >The geopolitical backdrop to the current threat against undersea cables is the Russian invasion of Ukraine, China’s behaviour towards Taiwan and the Israel-Gaza war, but they have long been an obvious target.
    >
    >The cables – thick as a garden hose when laid in deep water – carry 99% of international telecommunications traffic for personal, business and government use, with 530 submarine cable systems in service around the world, spanning more than 850,000 miles.
    >
    >A typical global submarine cable map is a stark visual representation of the connectivity of the world and its vulnerability to disruption. These cables facilitate trillions of dollars worth of financial transactions a day, carry sensitive government communications, deliver voice calls and transmit data around the internet.
    >
    >Dr Sidharth Kaushal, a senior research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute, a defence and security thinktank, says undersea cables are vital to the global economy and are therefore of clear interest to any state wanting to cause trouble.
    >
    >“If you look at the amount of global data that goes through these cables, the ramifications of sustained damage are quite significant,” he says.
    >
    >However, given the sheer amount of cables around the world’s seabeds, a truly damaging attack would require sustained and very public action. One advantage of one-off attacks such as the Baltic Sea incident is their plausible deniability, says Dr Kaushal. Nonetheless, he says, the economic threat behind an attack means they can still send a “potent diplomatic signal”.
    >
    >…
    >
    >Recorded Future, a US cybersecurity firm, said in a report last year that Russia was monitoring undersea cable systems closely.
    >
    >“Russia, eager to inflict pain on the west for its support of Ukraine, has demonstrated an increased intent to map the submarine cable system, very likely for potential sabotage or disruption.”
    >
    >In 2015, the New York Times reported that Russian submarines and spy ships were operating “aggressively” near undersea cables from the North Sea to north-east Asia.
    >
    >However, it is not just Russia under suspicion.
    >
    >A report by Taiwan’s national audit office this year said foreign ships had damaged cables linking the country with its outer islands 36 times since 2019, with 12 incidents registered last year. The damage was caused by a variety of vessels including fishing boats, cargo boats and sand dredgers.
    >
    >…
    >
    >Howard Kidorf, a managing partner at Pioneer Consulting, which advises companies on submarine cable networks, says the steel-wrapped lines can be cut “somewhat easily” if rogue actors want to cause disruption.
    >
    >“To sever a cable deliberately, most malign agents would use the same means as an accidental break: an anchor or other grapple at the end of a rope of chain,” he says.
    >
    >Until the late 1950s, shark bites were also a problem for telegraphic cables, although no such attacks have occurred in recent decades, according to the International Cable Protection Committee, which says the majority of cable faults since 1959 have been caused by fishing and anchors.
    >
    >Repairs can be expensive and time-consuming. A submarine cable costs about $40,000 a mile and a new transatlantic cable would cost between $200m and $250m, according to research group Dgtl Infra. At their deepest point, transatlantic cables reach about 4,000 metres.
    >
    >Recorded Future has also noted that Chinese state-owned or affiliated entities have sought a greater stake in the global submarine cable network, which it claims is “almost certainly increasing China’s ability to manipulate, surveil and interfere with worldwide data flows”.

    It might be worth investigating ways to make these critical physical links more secure going forward both physically as well as functionally. For some reason I’d always been under the impression that these undersea cables were more substantial than they actually are.

  4. AvailableToe9173 on

    First Magats went for the power grid, now they’re targeting undersea internet cables. They really just want us all to be isolated and afraid. This could literally be a death sentence for the most vulnerable who rely on the internet to provide emotional and psychological support.

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