A spate of sabotage attacks on underwater cables, allegedly perpetrated by a Russian "shadow fleet", have shown global telecommunications infrastructure is poorly protected against deliberate acts of ...
Most of the world's data travels via ocean cables, which are at risk of frequent sabotage. DW explains where they lie and how they are protected.
Chunghwa Telecom Co (中華電信) immediately switched to a microwave backup system to maintain communications between Taiwan proper ...
LONDON—For around a decade, the Russian spy ship Yantar has crossed the globe and loitered over undersea cables in what ...
He also said he had authorised a Royal Navy submarine ... and map crucial subsea infrastructure, the newspaper reported.
Cables essential to internet traffic are damaged hundreds of times a year. It may not always be accidental, Justin Sherman ...
Sailing off the south coast of England, the Russian trawler known as the Yantar carried its usual array of hi-tech equipment.
The Cameroon-registered cargo ship “Shunxing-39” is suspected to have caused damage to Chunghwa Telecom’s submarine cables ... US navy cut the telegraphic cable off the coast of Cuba to disrupt the ...
There are growing fears among NATO members that Russian President Vladimir Putin could target underwater cables.