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kados
Hail Odin
Premium
join:2003-03-14
Watertown, SD
·Midcontinent Commu..
·Qwest.net

Had to say it....

I was the aliens, they don't want us to spread information all over the world...hhehehe

Seriously though, 5 lines now cut? Does this seem a weird coincidence to anyone else?
--
09-F9-11-02-9D-74-E3-5B-D8-41-56-C5-63-56-88-C0 What is it? Is IT? What is it?


Phil
Rojo Sol
Premium
join:2001-06-11
Camarillo, CA
·DSL EXTREME


edit:
February 6th, @11:31AM

said by kados See Profile :

Seriously though, 5 lines now cut? Does this seem a weird coincidence to anyone else?
It's far beyond coincidence at this point...


fireflier
Coffee. . .Need Coffee
Premium
join:2001-05-25
Limbo
reply to kados
Unless lines in that region have historically had this kind of problem, I would consider 5 cut lines to be a suspicious statistical anomaly.


morbo
Complete Your Transaction

join:2002-01-22
00000
clubs:
·Charter Pipeline
·AT&T Southwest

said by fireflier See Profile :

5 cut lines to be a suspicious statistical anomaly.
chance of this happening being 1 in billions (or even trillions at this point).


swhx7
Premium
join:2006-07-23
Elbonia
·RoadRunner Cable

reply to kados
Historically, nations have refrained from cutting communications cables even in wartime. It harms both sides, and would set a bad precedent. It would be a setback for civilized international relations if this norm has been trashed by a lawless superpower on a mad crusade to dominate an oil-rich region.

The US has at least one submarine that is specifically designed with the capability to tap undersea cables (Google with words: "Jimmmy Carter" submarine cable tap). Presumably there would be an outage during installation of the tap. Also, severing or disabling the cable in one location would create a distraction for a tap to be installed somewhere else.


gaforces
United We Stand, Divided We Fall

join:2002-04-07
Santa Cruz, CA
·Cruzio Internet

Cutting so many at once draws too much attention to the possibility that that is true, and they will be inspected more thoroughly. It could be that someone is in a hurry to get as much questionable monitoring capability, as they can before they are not able to. It shouldn't be that hard to locate a tap unless they are restricted from inspecting in some areas.

Anyways I think it's more likely that this year has had more storms affecting ships in that they are choosing to drag anchor in cable areas instead of floundering onto some reef or shoreline that would damage the ships and put their crews in danger.
--
‘Do ye, quieting in your bosoms your strong hearts,
Who of many good things have had your fill even to surfeit,
With what is moderate nourish your mighty desire; for neither will
We yield, nor shall you have all else as you wish.’
Solon


elios

join:2005-11-15
Springfield, MO
·Mediacom


edit:
February 6th, @02:10PM

reply to swhx7
to bad they dont have to cut the cable to make it work
even the first wiretap sub didnt so thats out
even in the 1970s and 80's all they had to do was park a box next to cable and monitor it via induction no cutting needed

you want to do this kinda thing with OUT cutting the cable
that kinda lets them know your there

skrupowies

join:2002-08-22
Wallingford, CT
clubs:
·AT&T U-Verse

said by elios See Profile :

even in the 1970s and 80's all they had to do was park a box next to cable and monitor it via induction no cutting needed

Tha article said this is affecting fiber cables and fiber can not be read by induction. For induction to work you need a magnetic field and that means electricity which means copper.


fireflier
Coffee. . .Need Coffee
Premium
join:2001-05-25
Limbo
·RoadRunner Cable

True, however I seem to recall hearing of a case where a U.S. sub intercepted a soviet fiber cable. They didn't cut it, they cut open the sheath, and bent the fibers slightly. Enough to cause light leakage through the fiber wall that could be detected by their equipment to intercept traffic, but not enough to cause detectable degradation by the cable terminal equipment.
--
Wishes: When you wish upon a falling star, your dreams can come true. Unless it's really a meteorite hurtling to the Earth which will destroy all life. Then you're pretty much hosed no matter what you wish for. Unless it's death by meteor. --despair.com


AnonProxy
Proxy of Anon
Premium
join:2001-05-12
ß

reply to swhx7
You have no idea what you are talking about, so just don't start making up rumors.

The ability to "tap" copper and even now fiber is well outside the need to cut into anything.
Heck we could "tap" copper from space years ago, with the assistance of some pretty small ground based equipment.

Lastly, if you cut so many that it raised such a suspicion, that people actually thought you were tapping or cutting lines for a reason, it sort of defeats the covert reason to tap or cut a line. You know that every foot of that line is going to be inspected at some point in the very near future with "cable crawlers".


AnonProxy
Proxy of Anon
Premium
join:2001-05-12
ß

reply to skrupowies
You don't need to cut into a figer cable and they are not using "induction". induction implies and requires a magnetic field, well for the most part it does. There is the technology to read fiber in a method similar to "induction" in that you don't need to cut the cable, and now you don't even need to cut the cable housing. You can park a box next to the fiber or on a cable crawler and "read" the fiber outside the sheath.


subthinker

@comcast.net
reply to kados
Let's think this through. Has anyone seen Paul Allen's mega yacht in the area? Or is it the union leaders who are tired of their jobs being exported?


Historyguy

@comcast.net

reply to swhx7
said by swhx7 See Profile :

Historically, nations have refrained from cutting communications cables even in wartime.
Sorry, but you're wrong here. During WWI, one of the first thing the Brits did was to cut the transatlantic cable from Germany to the United States. Made it easier to spread their version of facts in the war, and also led to even more anger when Germany sent the Zimmerman Note, since they sent it to Mexico over a telegraph line from the German Embassy in D.C. that was paid for by the US gov't earlier in the war.

Go back even further than that, and you'll find plenty of instances of telegraph lines being cut during the Civil War as well. Hitting an enemy's communications are a critical part of wartime strategy, whether internal or external.


morbo
Complete Your Transaction

join:2002-01-22
00000
clubs:
·Charter Pipeline
·AT&T Southwest

reply to gaforces
said by gaforces See Profile :

Cutting so many at once draws too much attention to the possibility that that is true, and they will be inspected more thoroughly.
i disagree. i now believe that people will be thinking this as a reason that it can't be suspicious, so it's even better!
-
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