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posted by martyb on Sunday September 24 2017, @01:36AM   Printer-friendly
from the sure-beats-dialup dept.

Microsoft, Facebook, and Telxius have completed the Marea subsea cable, which connects Virginia Beach, Virginia, U.S. to Bilbao, Spain:

The Marea cable's new "open" design allows it to evolve with technology, ensuring the highest performance for users now and well into the future, even as the global population of internet users grows. And make no mistake, the demand is growing. Just think of the many high-bandwidth applications and content you use today such as Skype and Facebook Live, and the volume of streaming videos, movies and music consumed daily. This ability to interoperate with many different kinds of networking equipment brings significant benefits including lower costs and easier equipment upgrades, leading to faster growth in bandwidth rates.

Completed in less than two years — nearly three times faster than is typical — Marea is a powerful example of the important role the private sector has to play in connecting the world. It also set a new standard for subsea cables because it is designed to meet today's demand and evolve with the progress of tomorrow, allowing companies offering digital services to be better equipped to handle cross-border internet traffic, which is expected to increase eightfold by 2025.

VentureBeat notes:

Elsewhere, Google and Facebook last year partnered on a new submarine cable project between Los Angeles and Hong Kong, while a new Google-backed transpacific internet cable from Japan to Oregon opened for business. Earlier this year, Google revealed it was also backing Indigo, a new undersea cable between Asia and Australia.

It was no surprise to learn that Amazon — a competitor in the cloud services space alongside Google and Microsoft — made its first major subsea cable investment last year when it plowed money into the transpacific Hawaiki cable, which should improve latency for Amazon Web Services (AWS) users in Australia and New Zealand.

[...] Though the cable should help bring greater speeds to connections between North America and Europe, it may also have a knock-on effect for Asia and Africa, which are connected via the same landmass.

Also at PC Magazine, eWeek, ZDNet, and Data Center Knowledge.


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  • (Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 24 2017, @03:37PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 24 2017, @03:37PM (#572336)

    "Google found out that the NSA was tapping their inter-datacenter traffic, and decided to encrypt everything"

    while they were acting so outraged about their own stupidity(or complicity) in not encrypting their users' data to begin with they were on year 8 or so of "strong arming" the whole internet to use tls1.0 because they wouldn't ever update googlebot to use tlsv1.1 and v1.2. this was while people had to temporarily downgrade to rc4 to avoid beast, even though rc4 was probably breakable by the nsa. rc4 was only necessary when one couldn't use tlsv1.1 or 1.2. later, it was solved client side but for a while millions were just vulnerable. one could have chosen to be vulnerable to beast instead of rc4 breaking but you get the point. also, the whole point of beast could have been "kettling" people to rc4. either way, google is a prism partner and was more than doing it's part when this whole "outrage" happened.

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 25 2017, @10:37AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 25 2017, @10:37AM (#572611)

    If anyone didn't know, Microsoft is also part of PRISM. [aclu.org]