tien_dm on Fri, 29 Dec 2006 06:24:12 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Asia's Cyber-tsunami, The day that the internet stopped, again. |
Hello Nettime, You might have heard. On Tuesday night (26 Dec)a series of earthquake in Taiwan snapped underwater cables connecting Hong Kong, Taiwan and China to North America, Japan and Korea. (About 5 cables were damaged including the APCN2 and Sea-Me-We3 lines)Thus disrupting the internet phone services, internet access, slow e-mail traffic (or zero-e-mail traffic for some places). According to the Chunghwa Telecom Co. and Singapore Telecommunications Ltd. , it may need weeks to resume full Internet and phone services in Asia. I shuddered in fear when I heard this. This is the biggest technological disaster which affected the whole of Asia-Pacific. With some news headlines calling this event the Cyber-tsunami (what the?) Ironically, few weeks ago, the Singapore government was offering Free Island-Wide WIFI services for all Singaporeans. Now with all the WIFI we got, we are still stumped by the stark reality of the Internet. Internet is made up of physical Internet cables and vulnerable to earthquakes, shark bites and fishermen. For the record, it was not too long ago, a similar incident happened. On 21st Sept 1999 where earthquakes in Taiwan snapped the Asian Pacific Cable Network (APCN)which resulted in an Internet Outage outage of 9½ hours in Singapore and countries sharing this cable. (An incident which became a starting point for alpha series net artwork by tsunamii.net.) History does repeats itself. This time I am amused by the corporate charade performed by the Internet providers, underwater scenes of divers fixing the cable and news of distraught Internet users big and small. Lastly, it is not accurate to call this a total communication breakdown. The Internet outage transformed Singapore into a National Intranet so locally hosted sites rule for the day. Not sure how it is for other affected countries. Below is the latest news from Channel News Asia on the quake and the Internet situation. On the site you can also find a short video footage of underwater divers fixing cables. An image of engineers in a server farm looking busy or re-routing traffic. Yours Woon Tien Wei From URL: http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/eastasia/view/249603/1/.html Telecoms services in Asia could take weeks to fully return By Channel NewsAsia's Taiwan Correspondent, Ken Teh | Posted: 28 December 2006 2215 hrs TAIPEI: Telecommunications companies across Asia are scrambling to repair and reroute voice and data traffic after Tuesday's earthquake off Taiwan damaged critical undersea fibre optic lines, causing the region's biggest telecoms disruption in recent years. Failed international calls in Taipei, sluggish internet speeds from Singapore to Seoul are all part of an Asian-wide telecoms blight that has left some areas languishing in a virtual pre-Internet era. Businesses ranging from banks to boutiques have been affected by the fallout. In Taiwan's stock market, trading volumes dropped and brokers faced problems getting updated stock prices. Hsu Ren Xiang, Taiwanese Dealer, says: "Yesterday morning, callers from Mainland China couldn't get through. This affected orders and (international) transactions fell by 20 percent." Even retailers have been affected. Many customers face problems paying with international credit cards, which require phone lines to confirm transactions. The telecoms fallout was triggered by Tuesday's 7.1 magnitude earthquake in Taiwan that damaged several undersea fibre optic cables. These cables carry voice and data traffic between Taiwan and the rest of the world. Chunghwa Telecom, Taiwan's largest phone company, has deployed four cable ships to fix the damaged lines and repairs could take as long as three weeks. It put revenue losses caused by Tuesday's quake at around US$3 million. Lin Jen-hung, Vice-General Manager, Taiwan's Chunghwa Telecom Company, says: "There are four damaged undersea cables. Re-construction is underway. By next week, there will be at least three crews working in the South-eastern sea of Pingdong." With repairs being made and traffic rerouted, Chunghwa Telecom says it has restored some 70 percent of its international call capacity and its data lines to Hong Kong, Singapore and other parts of Southeast Asia are almost back to normal. Experts say the communications chaos has shown up the fragility of Asia's oceanic cable network. The bottlenecks also highlight the need for more such cables in Asia to prevent similar catastrophes. Above all, this recent fallout shatters the supposed invulnerability of the internet to withstand large-scale disasters. - CNA/so # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: [email protected] and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]