The Baltic undersea cable cutting highlights the internet’s underlying vulnerabilities

The severing of a key subsea telecoms cable running under Europe’s Baltic Sea has caused a diplomatic incident this week, as both country’s politicians called the act “sabotage”—all while Russia, whom many say is the likely instigator, denies responsibility.

Meanwhile, the Danish navy has reportedly intercepted the Yi Peng 3, a bulk carrier that was spotted above the C-Lion1 cable at the time it was damaged, to question its crew about their motives. The vessel last stopped in Russia before the incident.

Whether it was cock-up or conspiracy, the incident that affected the 728-mile C-Lion1 cable is not unusual. There are more than 530 subsea cables crisscrossing the ocean floors around the world, carrying internet data from one continent and country to another. (The C-Lion1 connected Finland to Germany.) These lines often get damaged through accidents, sabotage, and natural occurrences.

This latest incident—the motives and reality of which are not yet known—highlight how precarious our internet connections can be, says Doug Madory, director of internet analysis at Kentik. “Submarine cables have been getting cut ever since submarine cables have been invented, just kind of innocently,” he says. That issue has only been exacerbated by a rise in sea traffic related to commerce and shipping. But Madory says there’s a “growing concern” that sabotage is being used against subsea internet cables in an attempt to exert geopolitical power.

The geopolitical reaction to the C-Lion1 severing has in many ways been more severe than any impact the action would have, reckons Madory. He’s been monitoring internet traffic in the area, which is largely unaffected—in large part thanks to the thicket of cables that crisscross one another in that part of Europe. “There’s a lot of infrastructure there, and so taking one piece out isn’t noticeable,” he says. But it does highlight the ease with which key infrastructure can be affected, either accidentally or intentionally.

The scale of the issue is evident when you look at the data. “Ninety-five percent of all internet connections use subsea cabling,” says Brendan Press, chief commercial officer of GBI, a global subsea cable connectivity provider. “That just reinforces the importance of subsea.” Press points out that elsewhere in the world, where infrastructure isn’t as built up or well-funded, the impact of any one outage could be more harmful.

In addition to raising geopolitical complaints against those countries believed to be responsible (as representatives of Germany and Finland have done this week), governments could do more for cable security, says Press. “They could deregulate markets and encourage more players in the market,” he says. “Not only does it provide diversity and redundancy, but it also provides an economic boost in terms of what it can do in terms of bringing new services.”

Building more projects would also hedge against the inevitability of something going wrong again, says Madory. “It’s impractical to try to guard every inch of submarine cable around the world,” he says. “The oceans are vast, so out in the open ocean, these are on their own out there.”

https://www.fastcompany.com/91232785/baltic-undersea-cable-cutting-internet-vulnerability?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Vytvořeno 8mo | 20. 11. 2024 19:50:05


Chcete-li přidat komentář, přihlaste se

Ostatní příspěvky v této skupině

Elon Musk has ‘fixed’ Grok—to be more like him than ever

As Elon Musk announced plans over the Fourth of July weekend to establish a third political party,

8. 7. 2025 12:50:09 | Fast company - tech
Dr. Becky is the parenting guru for the social media era. Now she’s an AI chatbot, too

Dolores Ballesteros, a Mexico-based mother of two, was getting desperate. Her 6-year-old son kept hitting his brother, age 3, and seemed angry at her all the time. No matter what she did, she coul

8. 7. 2025 12:50:07 | Fast company - tech
Five truths about being a female founder in 2025

Rarely has Silicon Valley experienced a more profound period of transformation than it has in the past handful of years. The big VC boom of 2020–2021. The great VC hangover starting in 2022. The g

8. 7. 2025 10:40:05 | Fast company - tech
YouTube to Hollywood: We are going to eat you

A YouTube executive needed only 27 minutes to make the case that the company is taking over all aspects of how people create and consume video online.

That was the length of a recent tal

8. 7. 2025 10:40:04 | Fast company - tech
How AI is advancing even faster than sci-fi visionaries imagined

Every time I read about another advance in AI technology, I feel like another figment

8. 7. 2025 8:20:06 | Fast company - tech
This planet is drawing huge flares from its young star

Scientists are tracking a large gas planet experiencing quite a quandary as it orbits extremely close to a young star – a predicament never previously observed.

This exoplanet, as

7. 7. 2025 20:40:06 | Fast company - tech