Securing the world’s subsea arteries demands a comprehensive global architecture that links national and regional efforts with international ones and modernizes the legal and institutional regime. The ...
Chinese researchers have unveiled a new deep-sea tool capable of cutting through the world’s most secure subsea cables − and it has many in the West feeling a little jittery. The development, first ...
Undersea cables face more risk from anchors and fishing than espionage or sabotage. Man-made damage accounts for more than two-thirds of cable faults.
The sole undersea cable connecting it to the rest of the world had been snapped by an underwater avalanche from the volcano.
From a chain of massive barges stretching from a Chinese beach into the sea, to a powerful new design for cutting undersea cables at record depths, China’s latest maritime innovations have captured ...
Internet users in India, Pakistan, and parts of the Middle East faced major disruptions after undersea cables in the Red Sea were damaged. The outage also affected the UAE, where networks like ...
The Red Sea is a major artery of the global Internet. More than a dozen subsea cables pass through it connecting Europe to the Middle East, Africa, and APAC, transporting huge swathes of data traffic.
This op-ed was written by Dr. Arun Teja Polcumpally, JSW Science and Technology Fellow at ASPI Delhi, and originally published in 9Dashline. The internet has become a medium of global connectivity ...
(The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) John Calabrese, American University (THE CONVERSATION) Chinese researchers have ...