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- Undersea cables are the unseen backbone of the global internet
Several cable failures in the Baltic Sea in 2023 raised suspicions of sabotage The strategic Red Sea corridor has emerged as a focal point for undersea cable threats
- In Colum McCann’s Twist, the undersea data cables that . . .
Soon after his arrival, news emerges of a ruptured undersea cable The chaos that ensues on land persuades Farrell of the worth of his assignment From the outset, Farrell deviates from his brief
- China’s new underwater tool cuts deep, exposing vulnerability . . .
In January 2025, a cable linking Latvia and Sweden was breached, triggering NATO patrols and a Swedish seizure of a vessel suspected of sabotage tied to Russian activities
- Only 15 known underwater internet cables connect Australia to . . .
Australia has established the new Cable Connectivity and Resilience Centre to address vulnerabilities posed by its growing dependency on the internet
- Undersea cables are vulnerable to sabotage – but this takes . . .
Targeting the cable networks in deeper waters require more sophisticated methods, which are much more challenging to carry out
- Submarine cables keep the world connected. They can also help . . .
Last month tech giant Meta announced plans to build the world’s longest submarine communication cable Known as Project Waterworth, the 50,000-kilometre cable would link five continents
- From the telegraph to AI, our communications systems have . . .
Building telegraph networks was a huge undertaking The first transatlantic cable was completed in 1858, spanning more than 4,000km between North America and Europe
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