Internet Down in Asia Pacific After Earthquakes in Taiwan

It’s hard to imagine that an relatively tame earthquake in term of casualty in Taiwan can cause major disruption to Internet and telecommunications services in countries around Asia Pacific. The main quake, at magnitude 6.7 for Taiwan’s Central Weather Bureau measurement and at magnitude 7.1 if measured by the US Geological Survey, struck off Taiwan’s southern coast at 8:26 PM local time on Tuesday, killing two people. The disruption has caused slowing and crawling Internet surfing traffic, with intermittent access downtime, and international circuit congestion.

According to Reuters, at least 6 fibre-optic submarine cable systems out of Taiwan in Asia that connects between East Asia region and Southeast Asia region had been cut and knocked out by the quakes. The undersea cables outages affect not only Taiwan itself, but the unable to surf Internet and VoIP down problem has also been experience across Asia Pacific in countries such as Japan, Korea, Hong Kong, China, Singapore, Indonesia and Philippines, where Internet users unable to access to websites located in United States (US) and unable to connect to login to instant messengers such as Yahoo! Messenger and Windows Live Messenger, and voice call facing all circuits is busy problem.

Various fixed-line, Internet and broadband service providers (ISPs) are working round the clock for traffic diversion, re-routing traffic and restoration works, which may takes 2 to 3 weeks, according to Bloomberg. However, it’s still weird and hard to understand why major telecommunications traffic has been dependent on cables around Taiwan, an earthquake prone area, and without any fall back or parallel redundancy links that can be used in short notice during emergency.

Share and contribute or get technical support and help at My Digital Life Forums.



One Response to “Internet Down in Asia Pacific After Earthquakes in Taiwan”

  1. In my opinion » Blog Archive » Without internet
    January 8th, 2007 00:24
    1

    [...] As pointed out on mydigitallife it’s still weird and hard to understand why major telecommunications traffic has been dependent on cables around Taiwan, an earthquake prone area, and without any fall back or parallel redundancy links that can be used in short notice during emergency. I hope the telecom companies will learn some lessons from the weaknesses exposed in the system by the natural disaster and focus more on alternative routes and back up systems. [...]

Leave a Reply

You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Subscribe without commenting


Custom Search

New Articles

Incoming Search Terms for the Article

taiwan porno - asya porno - ASYA PORN - taiwan porn - taivan porno - porno taiwan - asya sex - asya pornosu - porno azija - porn asya - philippine porno - porno asya - SEX ASYA - porno philippine - taıvan porn - taivan porn - asien sex - azija sex - taıvan porno - porno asien - asya.porno - taıwan porno - sex.t.v.porno - sex taiwan - taıwan porn - TAIWANSEX - porno taywan - taiwan xxx - Asien xxx - porno.taiwan - porno taivan - sex asien - porn asiya - sex taivan - SEX AZIJA - taiwan pornosu - asya.sex - PORN TAIWAN - taiwan girl xxx - tawan porno - asya xxx sex - taiwan porno - taywan porn - xxx azija - asiya porn - taıvan.porn - Porno in Taiwan - asien.sex - taywan porn. - asya pornoþu -