Re: Connectivity status for Egypt
I'm a reporter for Network World, and we're working on a series of stories re the Egyptian Internet blackout. I hope I can glean some information from the operators on this list for my story. It would be much appreciated. My question for NANOG operators is... Is the blackout disrupting your operations in Egypt, Northern Africa and/or the Middle East? Have you noticed any resumption of service since the outage went into effect on Thursday, Jan. 27? Also, a bill was introduced recently in Congress proposing an Internet "kill switch" to be used, apparently, in response to cyberattacks on the U.S.: http://edge.networkworld.com/news/2009/040209-obama-cybersecurity-bill.html?... Do you have any opinions on whether this "kill switch" could indeed be employed here to thwart attacks... or to suppress communications during time of political unrest? As a network operator, would you support such a bill? And would you comply with it if it indeed became law? Thank you, and best regards, Jim Duffy Managing Editor Network World
Jim, On Jan 28, 2011, at 12:43 PM, <JDuffy@nww.com> wrote:
And would you comply with it if it indeed became law?
For better or worse, companies will comply with lawful requests. In the event of US Civil Unrest, I think it would be much harder than in other regimes to exert this type of control, and would cause a much broader global impact to economic activity. The same would happen with any pan-european "blackout". For the economic reasons alone, I rate the chances of "kill-switch" a zero. It makes for great reporting about power, but the practicality is zero. (this does not preclude the US Government from disconnecting *its* enterprise networks, as has happened with Bureau of Indian Affairs in the past, etc...) - Jared Mauch
participants (2)
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Jared Mauch
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JDuffy@nww.com