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Elderly lady cuts off Internet in Armenia

engadget.com

37 points by tunaslut 15 years ago · 18 comments

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Peroni 15 years ago

Not just Armenia: In addition, areas of Georgia and Azerbaijan were also taken offline.

Much more detail in The Guardian article:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/apr/06/georgian-woman-c...

  • drtse4 15 years ago

    Here an interactive map: http://grt.ge/?m=static&s=6 , mouse over the nodes to display a summary of the available connections. See Armenia, Azerbaijan, etc... south of them.

    • GrandMasterBirt 15 years ago

      The one wire to rule them all?

      Seriously, invest into a second wire going overhead. Perhaps a third going a slightly different rout just incase.

ddol 15 years ago

‎"Our fibre backbone conforms to the highest level's of physical security", Mr. Ionatamishvili later said - calming worries that any curious eavesdropper could Man-in-the-Middle his countries communications. "We hide at least 70% of it under train tracks or shrubbery."

CaptainDecisive 15 years ago

I like the euphemism 'while foraging for copper wire'. Maybe we should use that phrase for torrents 'piracy?!? - no, don't be silly - I was just foraging for movies'.

  • BoppreH 15 years ago

    The guardian articles seems to explain it better:

      Pulling up unused copper cables for scrap is a common means of making money in the former Soviet Union. Some entrepreneurs have even used tractors to wrench out hundreds of metres of cable from the former nuclear testing ground at Semipalatinsk in Kazakhstan.
    • JoeAltmaier 15 years ago

      And stealing pipe is a common way to make extra cash in Ireland. Stealing is stealing.

      • BoppreH 15 years ago

        It might not be lawful, but I see it as somehow less wrong than stealing cables in use, or starting the trend.

        Related video, though I don't endorse this guy's actions: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KkLI2ywzRsA

        "I steal copper, not [from] family men. And send me my 20% [of this recordings profits] later."

        It's a weird world we live on.

CallMeV 15 years ago

They'll probably reinstall that cable, now, with one small addition: an off switch, and a soldier on post nearby. "Hello, Sergey, headquarters here. there's another insurrection. Throw the off switch." Sergey throws off switch "Okay, done." no signal "Hello? Hello?"

selectnull 15 years ago

Poor lady faces prison. What about people responsible for laying a cable like that, accessible to anyone with small scissors?

  • BoppreH 15 years ago

    She was digging for copper wires, and not even in her property. The photo you see with a small scissors is just a stock photo.

    • selectnull 15 years ago

      Small scissors were a sarcasm on my part :)

      The point I was trying to make was that whoever lays "critical fiber optic cable" in a way than an elderly lady comes with any kind of a tool, should be put to trial instead of poor woman who is probably living in poverty trying to survive.

      • BoppreH 15 years ago

        If the story was about a dog that dug some wires I would agree, but people are capable of a lot of things, even at old age. God knows how long she'd been digging.

        Also, on the Guardian article:

          The cable is owned by the Georgian railway network. It is heavily protected, but landslides or heavy rain may have exposed it to scavengers.
        
        If that's just an excuse or not, we will never know.
drtse4 15 years ago

What puzzles me is that Georgian Telecom didn't put in place any secondary line/s to provide an alternative path in case of issues on the working path.

Update: Checking Railway Telecom site http://grt.ge/?m=static&s=5 (here for the interactive map: http://grt.ge/?m=static&s=6) looks like it's an optical network based on CWDM equipments with links that provide a bit more than two 10GE between the nodes, definitely not a top-notch network. Automated path protection facilities couldn't even be available for networks of this type.

Update 2: Just noticed that the two bigger 10GE paths create a channel only from Poti to Tbilisi, so bandwidth for communications between internal nodes is provided by the other links (slower optical links and the ethernet ones (copper? hm) shown on the map).

grigy 15 years ago

I was affected by this outage. During that time I realized that Internet has became vital part of out life, like electricity or water.

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