As Iran war threatens undersea cables in the Strait of Hormuz, is it time to rethink the internet? - IN FOCUS: Undersea internet cables form the backbone of all worldwide connectivity, enabling bank ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Special ships lay data cables across the world's oceans. Stefan Sauer/picture alliance via Getty Images Have you ever wondered how ...
Businesses, hospitals, and households across Europe and Asia that depend on real-time digital services face a concrete ...
Most of us imagine the internet as something invisible, data flying through the air from our phones to the cloud and back. But the truth is far less glamorous and far more physical: over 95% of global ...
Explore how internet infrastructure and global networks really work, who controls critical data routes, and why undersea cables, cloud giants, and governments shape online power. Pixabay, ...
It's a little-known fact that undersea cables are necessary for a majority of international internet traffic and not mobile networks, satellites, or fixed internet. It's safe to say they are the ...
Finland-based Cinia Group began laying the new submarine Sea Lion data cable in Helsinki, Finland. The new fibre optic sea cable will provide a direct, low latency and cyber secure internet backbone ...
When one of the world's worst ever energy crises began in the Strait of Hormuz in February, few believed that their internet access – rather than their gas bill – would be the worst-affected aspect of ...
(The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Robin Chataut, Quinnipiac University (THE CONVERSATION) Have you ever wondered how an ...