sharks may be biting through Vietnam's Internet cables

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Jodiendo
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Beigetreten: 01/09/2013

http://www.dailydot.com/technology/sharks-vietnam-internet-cable/?tw=dd

By Aja Romano on January 06, 2015

f you live in Southeast Asia and can't stream YouTube videos or access Facebook, sharks may be to blame.

The underwater trans-Pacific cable that provides Internet to most of Southeast Asia broke again yesterday, leaving millions with slow or spotty connectivity. The region faces an estimated repair time of up to a month.
The Asia-America Gateway (AAG), launched in 2009, is an enormous underwater cable line stretching 12,000 miles across the Pacific. It connects 10 points throughout the Pacific islands and Southeast Asia and provides vital connectivity to several countries between Malaysia and California.

But one branch of the $500 million AAG has been continually beset with problems. The segment of the cable that runs between Vietnam and Hong Kong has ruptured four times within the last six months—twice near Hong Kong and twice near Vietnam. The latest incident occurred yesterday, when the cable broke near the Vietnamese city of Ba Ria.

In addition to Vietnam, the outage effects the cable's offshoot points further west, which means Internet users in Brunei, Singapore, Thailand, and Malaysia are also feeling the slow-down. Although these other countries rely on the cable, it is managed by one Vietnamese telecommunications company.

Investigators have not confirmed a reason for the latest rupture. One common explanation in these cases is that anchors from passing fishing trawlers snagged the cable and caused damage. Increasingly, however, cable watchers believe that the problem may be sharks.

Shark species in the region, these experts say, may be drawn to chow down on the cables, which send off electromagnetic waves that can act as sharkbait. One theory holds that sharks mistake the cables for the bioelectric fields surrounding schools of fish. Others suggest that perhaps sharks are merely overly curious.

Whatever the explanation, there are undoubtedly issues with sharks attacking undersea Internet cables. A surveillance camera attached to equipment reinforcing one of Google's cables captured video of one such attack in August.

To prevent sharks from chomping through fragile and expensive fiber-optic wires, Google, which has pledged to collaborate on a similar $300 million undersea cable to Japan, has started wrapping its cables in kevlar.

It's a smart plan, but it offers little in the way of comfort to frustrated Southeast Asians battling slow load times and month-long service outages.

tomlukeywood
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Beigetreten: 12/05/2014

would they not have steel around the cables?

danieru
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Beigetreten: 01/06/2013

Yeah, those cables are suppose to be strong. On the video we see a shark bitting a cable, but that doesn't mean that's enough to damage them.

Perhaps sharks have been biting since it was installed. But then, those sharks wouldn't be just curios, maybe they like bitting things, but then why this is not a common issue (don't seems)?

Or maybe they are hungry. Are people overfishing that sea?

Jodiendo
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Beigetreten: 01/09/2013

Lets not be naive about those Fiber and Copper Oceanic cables, those cables are real deep in some areas of the ocean. Varying in size and shape depending on the ocean depth. From 2000 to 3000 feet deep.

Yes, they are build for that type of water pressure, and design to resist certain damages,from Marine Animals attacks, specially sharks. Consider that any scrape or punctures on those cables causes interruptions for millions of people worldwide. Nothing is damage proof, but resistance yes. A combination of strong bite causing a miniature hole in the cable and the water pressure is enough to water damage the cable.

The worst offenders are ships anchors, sea wrecks, earth quakes and Marine animals .

For more info follow the following web links:
http://twistedsifter.com/2012/07/the-undersea-cables-that-connect-the-world/
http://atlantic-cable.com//Article/1923CableLaying/index.htm
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Submarine_communications_cable

More old News:

http://www.iflscience.com/plants-and-animals/sharks-keep-attacking-googles-deep-ocean-internet-cables
http://www.nytimes.com/1987/06/11/us/phone-company-finds-sharks-cutting-in.html

Enjoy!!