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posted by CoolHand on Friday May 27 2016, @06:15PM   Printer-friendly
from the really-long-things dept.

Geekwire reports on a post on Microsoft's corporate blog in which plans for a transatlantic communications cable are announced. The cable will connect Bilbao in Spain to Virginia Beach, Virginia in the USA. Construction is set to begin in August. The planned capacity of 160 Tbps would, according to the blog post, exceed that of any existing transatlantic cable. The project is to be a joint venture of Microsoft with Facebook, and is to be operated by the Telxius arm of Telefónica.

From the Geekwire article:

Microsoft and Facebook will place a cutting-edge undersea cable across the Atlantic Ocean, stretching 6,600 kilometers or more than 4,100 miles from Virginia Beach, Va., to Bilbao, Spain, capable of hurtling data under the ocean at speeds of 160 Terabits per second.

The companies say the new project, called Marea, will be the highest-capacity subsea cable ever placed across the Atlantic, the first to connect the U.S. to southern Europe. Construction will begin in August 2016, with completion scheduled for October 2017, the companies say.

"We're seeing an ever-increasing customer demand for high speed, reliable connections for Microsoft cloud services, including Bing, Office 365, Skype, Xbox Live, and Microsoft Azure," said Microsoft's Frank Rey in a post announcing the plan.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 27 2016, @07:32PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 27 2016, @07:32PM (#351743)

    The purpose of this would be to serve the content from the US and eliminate subsidiaries in countries that would have privacy violations caused by hosting inside the country. If there is no local entity to sue a lot of the current issues go away. 160 Terabits could go a long ways towards allowing that. I'm not sure what the hop latency is, but it is probably low enough to game across given past MMO experience.

  • (Score: 4, Insightful) by janrinok on Friday May 27 2016, @09:01PM

    by janrinok (52) Subscriber Badge on Friday May 27 2016, @09:01PM (#351763) Journal
    Of course, if the EU enters into the proposed trading pact, European countries could sue MS and Facebook, but only in a US court and there is no guessing which way that would go, is there? This looks more about US companies trying to get around European laws with no chance of any legal retribution.