News

Damage to submarine cables in the Red Sea is disrupting telecommunications networks and forcing providers to reroute as much as a quarter of traffic between Asia, Europe and the Middle East ...
Undersea cables in the Red Sea — the invsible forces powering the internet — have been damaged, forcing major internet providers to divert as much as 25% of internet traffic between Asia ...
At least four undersea fiber optic cables, which carry approximately 97% of all Internet traffic, were damaged last week in the Red Sea, telecommunications providers are reporting, and instability ...
Major cables carrying data in the Red Sea, the waterway between Northeast Africa and the Arabian Peninsula that connects Europe with Asia, have reportedly been damaged by Houthi rebels operating from ...
Alongside the cable incidents in the Red Sea, the paper also points at damage to the SEA-ME-WE 5 cable in the Strait of Malacca – another submarine cable bottleneck – in April this year. This damage ...
Repairs have finally commenced on three subsea telecommunications cables that were damaged in the Red Sea in February, even as Houthi militants escalate their attacks on ships in the area. The AAE-1 ...
The 'submarine cable connecting Europe and Asia through the Red Sea,' which was cut in February 2024 due to attacks by Yemeni militants, has been repaired. However, of the three cables that were ...