German tech company AP Sensing just developed a technology that lets undersea cables detect tampering and sabotage through ...
Latvian authorities are investigating a serious incident in which an undersea fiber optic cable was damaged in the Baltic Sea ...
An undersea fiber optic cable between Latvia and Sweden was damaged on Sunday, likely as a result of external influence, Latvia said, triggering an investigation by local and NATO maritime forces in ...
March 4, 2025: Since late 2024 there have been several underwater cables cut in the Baltic Sea. The cable tampered with included one for power, one for data and one for natural gas. The damage was ...
South Korean telecom operator KT has announced that it plans to build a new submarine fiber optic cable to meet the growing demand for cloud services, big data. ASABA ...
Communications cables are only part of the story. A far broader array of systems now covers the ocean floor – and must be protected. But communications cables are only part of the story. A far broader ...
IIIF provides researchers rich metadata and media viewing options for comparison of works across cultural heritage collections. Visit the IIIF page to learn more. Satellites provide unprecedented ...
An operator installs undersea fiber optic cable at Arrietara beach near the Spanish Basque village of Sopelana. The infrastructure is funded by Facebook and Microsoft. (Ander Gillenea / AFP via Getty ...
The authorities seized the Fitburg, a cargo ship that was en route from Russia to Israel when it sliced the cable in the Gulf ...
PALM COAST, Fla. — Florida is now home to a major piece of global internet infrastructure. Google has announced “Sol,” a new undersea cable connecting Palm Coast to Santander, Spain. Sol is the first ...
We have received text from H.R. 261: Undersea Cable Protection Act of 2025. This bill was received on 2025-01-09, and currently has 5 cosponsors. The bill states that once undersea fiber optic cables ...
I bet you imagine the internet as a magical cloud floating wirelessly between satellites and Wi-Fi routers. Nope. It’s mostly underwater. Nearly all of your “in the cloud” traffic actually travels ...