NSA/U.S. Navy Working to Intercept Fiber Optic Cables 303
Jeff Robertson writes: "Fiber optic cables have advantage of being difficult to wiretap. As optical amplifiers replace electro-optical regenerators in undersea routes, it gets even harder. Lightwave Magazine has an article
quoting the Washington Post as claiming the
National Security Agency 'is known to be hard at work trying to gain access to fiber optic cables' and the U.S. Navy will spend '$1 billion to retrofit its premier spy submarine, the USS Jimmy Carter' to get access to deep-sea fiber routes.
They also assert that the U.S. government is bailing out Global Crossing to prevent its undersea routes falling into foreign hands."
rofl (Score:3, Funny)
Re:rofl (Score:4, Flamebait)
Re:rofl (Score:5, Funny)
Re:rofl (Score:2)
I liked the USN Submarine Service much better back when attack boats were named for sea creatures (the Growler, the Hammerhead, the Albacore etc.), but Hyman G. "Father of the Nuclear Navy" Rickover screwed that all up: "Fish don't vote!" Thanks to him, we got 688s named for cities for a while there, supposedly to increase voter -- and ultimately Congressional -- support. OTOH, although we now have a new Seawolf, we also have another attack boat named for a state (the Virginia) and one named for a president (the Jimmy Carter).
I do kinda like USS Badass, though. Might be a good name for one of those Cyclone-class littoral-warfare PCs that support SEAL operations inshore. Maybe her sister ships could be USS Ass Kicker, USS Tough Guy, USS Snake Eater, and USS Get Yer Beady Eyes Offa Me.
Re:rofl (Score:3, Funny)
Re:rofl (Score:5, Interesting)
Quote (Score:3, Insightful)
Jimmy Carter was a wonderful President if your only criterion was to have ethical perfection to balance everyone's disappointment in Richard Nixon.
Unfortunately, despite all of that, his biggest fault was micromanaging. Tales were told of the 16 hour days Jimmy would put in, but spent his time resolving staff disputes by scheduling use of the White House tennis courts himself.
Meanwhile, Ronald Reagan just delegated everything out and worked many less hours and, by those measures was a much more effective manager. [For the record, I didn't think much of Ronald's appointees. And, GHB was right, it was voodoo economics.]
But the quote I remember, that Slashdot should remember, is that:
Re:Quote (Score:2)
Re:rofl (Score:3, Funny)
Once, as an actor, he played the role of a submarine commander, and in a makeshift dressing room aboard the sub (while it was in dock) one day, was practicing his lines.
The crew heard this, thought it was the real captain speaking, and the sub almost ripped the dock apart before the captain ran up shouting "All stop! All stop, God damn it!"
Re:rofl (Score:2)
I'd quote it verbatim, but I don't have the book I read it in with me - the title is Blind Man's Bluff, don't recall the author; it's about submarine espionage during the Cold War.
Re:rofl (Score:2)
Carter served on a diesel sub and left the navy before working on a nuke. The article gives some good insight into the naming of Naval vessels and Carter's record as funding the Navy goes.
Re:rofl (Score:2)
For the record, I've got nothing against Reagan or against naming vessels after non-military figures--especially presidents. I just wanted to clear up some misconceptions of Jimmy; this particular naming decision seems more relevant than most, is all.
Stoolpigeon, I'll have to check some other sources--but Grolier's, where I checked my original information, disagrees with the article you've cited: Carter Biography [gi.grolier]
So does the mini-bio on www.americanpresident.org. And, for that matter, the jimmycarter.org site and some site on Georgia history I turned up on Google. I've probably got an auto-biography around the house some place that I can check... interesting if the usni.org blurb is true, though.
Appropriate Naming (Score:2)
Re:rofl (Score:2)
Re:rofl (Score:2)
Pilot: No, Sir, the closest vessel in the USS Walter Mondale [snpp.com]. It's a laundry ship. They'll take you the rest of the way.
~Philly
Re:rofl (Score:2)
Its necessary (Score:5, Insightful)
Its NOT "necessary"! (Score:4, Insightful)
How about setting those sensible limits at your borders? Respect other country's privacy for once.
Stop being a bunch of international bullies/control freaks. The cold war is over.
Re:Its NOT "necessary"! (Score:2, Redundant)
Re:Its NOT "necessary"! (Score:2, Interesting)
for everything from wiretapping to the drug war.
There is no 'war' on terrorism...only on certain terrorists. The US still fully supports any terrorist or criminal group that suits their goal,
sorta like your old buddy Bin Laden did before he got a little uppity.
I presume that the Saudis who are involved up to their eyeballs in 9-11 must still be useful to the US oil interests or else there would have been a big oil slick where that country once stood.
This topic does brings back the same question that terrorism always does?
If the US is allowed to do something, why shouldnt another country be allowed to do the same?
Re:Its NOT "necessary"! (Score:3, Insightful)
Stupid Debate (Score:4, Insightful)
For the record: Most countries spy. However, if a people sanction spying by their country on others and accept that their government has a right to do so (ie they as the people should not be stopping their government from doing it), they can scarcely take the moral high ground when it is done in return to them or when their allies (not enemies I say!) discover they are being spied on and become rather upset.
It's one thing to spy quietly and mostly innocuously and try very hard not to let anyone in your country or anywhere else know you are doing it. It is another thing to publicly make available the fact you are setting out to violate other countries' private communications. Especially when some of those countries are: military allies, political allies, and long standing trade partners.
I think the simple rule here is: Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. And if you happen to think the fact that America owns an extremely temporary (from a historical perspective) hegemony in technology and military force over most of the world and that somehow confers a right to use such power as a club to forward its own agenda and that this is morally correct behaviour, then you should be equally happy when someone one day returns the favour.
I don't really care what side of this fence anyone is on, but it does piss me off when they try to occupy both sides (spying while decrying same, invading and bombing other sovereign nations and supporting death squads and covert ops in other nations while decrying same).
Another phrase comes to mind: Sew the wind, reap the whirlwind.
Re:Stupid Debate (Score:2)
Re:Its NOT "necessary"! (Score:2)
Re:Its NOT "necessary"! (Score:2)
Personally I wonder why exactly the US refused the offer that Sudan made several years ago to turn over Usama Bin Laden to us.
Re:Its NOT "necessary"! (Score:2)
"I'm sure if you were to try something like that any local US judge would call you a nut job and throw the book at you, or put you somewhere where you can get all the "happy candy" you want along with a nice white coat."
Isn't that what somebody should have done to the idiots who declared war on something that isnt even a country?
Re:Its NOT "necessary"! (Score:2)
Why? Nations spy on each other. They always have, and are going to continue to do so for the forseeable future. We spy on other countries. They spy on us. It's a tool of statecraft, and damn nessecary one because when you sit there and just assume that everyone is honest and has your best interests at heart, you usually end up sitting there with a dumb look on your face when
somebody starts smashing planes your buildings (Of course, we may have had the information to stop this - or may not have. Once you have it, processing it is hard) or those "presidential palaces" actually contain bio weapons facilities.
What country are you from that doesn't have any form of intelligence agency, hmm?
Warrants?? (Score:3, Insightful)
Remember that this country was ruled by J Edgar Hoover for decades, since he as the head of the FBI could crush any US politician, including most Presidents, that didn't comply with his demands.
All your optics ... (Score:1)
The government has finaly figured this out.. (Score:1)
second part makes sense (Score:1, Informative)
Re:second part makes sense (Score:1)
Seriously, there was some good thought that went in there, 1 mile out of 5 had to be straight for emergency aircraft landings, and it's the easiest way to move a tank from Seattle to Los Angeles
Re:second part makes sense (Score:3, Informative)
This actually isn't true..
From : [snopes2.com]
"Richard Weingroff, information liaison specialist for the Federal Highway Administration's Office of Infrastructure and the FHA's unofficial historian, says the closest any of this came to touching base with reality was in 1944, when Congress briefly considered the possibility of including funding for emergency landing strips in the Federal Highway-Aid Act (the law that authorized designation of a "National System of Interstate Highways"). At no point was the idea kited of using highways or other roads to land planes on; the proposed landing strips would have been built alongside major highways, with the highways serving to handle ground transportation access to and from these strips. The proposal was quickly dropped, and no more was ever heard of it.
Some references to the one-mile-in-five assertion claim it's part of the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956. This piece of legislation committed the federal government to build what became the 42,800-mile Eisenhower Interstate Highway System, which makes it the logical item to cite concerning regulations about how the interstate highway system was to be laid out. The act did not, however, contain any "one-in-five" requirement, nor did it even suggest the use of stretches of the interstate system as emergency landing strips. The one-out-of-five rule was not part of any later legislation either. "
Re:second part makes sense (Score:2)
Outages?! (Score:2)
Re:Outages?! (Score:5, Funny)
"What, you going to tell me your backbone took a backhoe?"
"No, it was run into by a super-secret spy subm--."
Re:Outages?! (Score:1)
Suppose ... (Score:1)
Sharks or Seals? (Score:5, Funny)
Every time the trans-Atlantic connections are down they give us this same line about the "sharks who like to chew on cables", and all the while it has been a bunch of Navy SEALs trying to patch an optical wiretap, equipped with a combat knife and a legth of wire?
Re:Sharks or Seals? (Score:2)
Ech, it's just Cryptonomicon all over again.... (Score:2)
USS Jimmy Carter? (Score:4, Insightful)
Oh jeez, I had to read the article to make sure this wasn't some sort of Simpsons joke. I know, I know, Jimmy was a Nuke Engineer on a Sub before he drove the country into double digit inflation and created the misery index while wearing a sweater. But I was shocked that he already had a military ship named after him. Anyone know what the rules are for that? Is it a military thing or a Congressional?
I thought this was interesting:
They also assert that the U.S. government is bailing out Global Crossing to prevent its undersea routes falling into foreign hands.
The Global Crossing bankruptcy is as large as Enron but the Press hasn't hyped it as much. There have been many conspiracy theories as to why. This might be the real reason and not because the DNC Nation Chairman turned $100,000 into $18 million. The press might be protecting National Security because the Government has told them to shut up over the bankruptcy. Rumor was that the communist Chinese were itching to get their hands on it just like the Panama Canal. Anyone remember how communist Chinese got that? (Well at least both entry points).
Re:USS Jimmy Carter? (Score:1)
I'm not sure if they're still following any specific naming rules like they used to, but if you see this puppy [navy.mil] in or around your nation you might want to check those undersea lines.
Re:USS Jimmy Carter? (Score:2, Interesting)
Previously, the ships had to keep within a tight tilt angle (20 degrees or so) or else the cooling water drained from the pile and the reactor could overheat.
That's one of the theory's surrounding the russian Kursk fiasco. The ship tilted outside the specified angles after impact, forcing them to shut down the reactor. Once the reactor was shut down, the ship did not have the reserve capacity to surface, operate bilge or life support.
Bummer.
BTW: Carter was on the fast track in the Navy, he had to leave the forces when his father died to go back to Georgia and run the family business (peanut farming). While I think he was an awful president, he is a very smart man who contributed much to the county and the world. Even though his military policies, in a word, sucked.
Re:USS Jimmy Carter? (Score:2)
Thanks for that insight. I have always respected Jimmy Carter as a human being and knew the guy was super smart. His work after office shine more on him than his 4 years running the country. It was just sad to see him being used by Castro a month ago for propaganda purposes. I think he is looking back at that trip and kicking himself for making the statement that Castro was not producing chemical/bio weapons then was prevented from visiting the factory in question by Castro after Carter had made the statement.
The problem with the Presidency is that the smartest people seem to be the people worse suited to the job. I think Douglas Adams made allusions to this in HHGTG.
USS Richard Nixon (Score:2)
Xix.
Re:USS Jimmy Carter? (Score:2)
I thought it was Congress that has the power to spend money in the Government not the Executive Branch. As I remember, it was a Democratic Congress during Regan's term (except for the Senate for the first two years of his term). When the nation went into a balanced budget after 1994, there was a Republican congress in power during Clinton's second term. Interesting enough, now that the Democrats are back in power over the Senate, we stopped having a balanced budget. Maybe we should make it a law that we have Democrat Presidents and a Republican Congress to keep debt down and budgets balanced.
Does Regan have a carrier named after him?
Re:USS Reagan (Score:2)
Yes, Reagan does have a carrier named after him. It's a Nimitz class carrier, CVN 76 (USS Ronald Reagan) [navy.mil]. It is currently still under construction at Newport News shipyard in Virgina. Expected comissioning in 2003, planned arrival in San Diego in 2004, and the first deployment is figured for sometime in 2005.
Re:USS Reagan (Score:2)
Re:USS Jimmy Carter? (Score:2)
Now, I wonder what piece of military hardware that Clinton will get named after him...
Re:USS Jimmy Carter? (Score:2)
Each part of the navy thinks it's the most important. They refer to themselves as communities (so the carriers are the Naval Aviation community, the anything but carriers crowd is the Surface Warfare community, etc.). Some naval catalogs list carriers as the premier warships, others submarines, and a case can be made for either.
I'm not sure why Jimmy got a sub named after him, much less the biggest and baddest sub. For instance the Carl Vinson was named after the senator that got the Two Oceans Navy Act passed before WWII that got the Navy on an industrial roll before Pearl Harbor. Ronald Reagan is obvious due to the 80's buildup. But Jimmy just drew down the fleet. The submariners must be desperate for attention.
Re:USS Jimmy Carter? (Score:2)
So you are saying that the Communist Chinese do not have a habit of working through shell companies to obtain strategic resources? Hutchison Whampoa [google.com] is the perfect example of government control since the return of Hong Kong. The only company in a communist country is the government itself. It ultimately controls the operations of the corporations as many of the board members happen to be a member of the party as well.
The major difference between Enron and Global Crossing is that the highly leveraged position of Global Crossing is well known.
That should make the shareholders of Global Crossing feel much better now that you cleared that up. Its the #3 vs #4 biggest bankruptcy in the US. I think the fourth largest bankruptcy in the US is a big deal, even the K-Mart bankruptcy got more press and it was "minor" in comparison.
this is not news. (Score:5, Informative)
"The NSA is spying, and trying to get better at it."
Well, duh. That's what the NSA does. Good article on a GREAT book about the NSA. [salon.com] Heard the author speaking on NPR a while ago, which drove me to pick up the book. Excellent, excellent book.
Not saying this isn't news... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Not saying this isn't news... (Score:2, Informative)
Also, check out the old but interesting Submarine [amazon.com], a nonfiction Tom Clancy factfest that has lots of detail on the Jimmy Carter class boats. The Jimmy Carter was designed as a 'special projects' boat from the beginning.
Blind Man's Bluff taps coax, not fiber (Score:2)
Re:Blind Man's Bluff taps coax, not fiber (Score:2)
Sold Out for Political Gain (Score:1, Offtopic)
That there were no criminal charges for the way the DNC sold this country down the river for campaign contributions is amazing. We do not take China seriously and that is an error.
Sept. 11 (Score:5, Funny)
Under-da-water? (Score:1)
bling bling
Fiber is very easy to tap. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Fiber is very easy to tap. (Score:2)
Re:Fiber is very easy to tap. (Score:2)
Silly article. (Score:2)
--Blair
Re:Silly article. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Silly article. (Score:2)
I have no clue how they would store it- some discussion has postulated that it would be analyzed on-site, and only relevant parts stored for later retrieval. They'd periodically have to update it's rules, but that wouldn't be hard with it in place.
Re:Silly article. (Score:2)
One [alaskaunited.com] of three (well, two if you don't count spurrs) hooking Alaska to the rest of the U.S. (1,995 undersea miles) only has 4 strands, and it's designed such that "Each fiber pair can be upgraded to OC-192 by adding shore-based electronics without changing the wet plant."
How much (theoretical) trans-continental bandwith is there?
Research... Then ask. (Score:2)
Such as the fact that this project has been underway for over a year (the article is dated last year, and states
and the bit that I was looking for
I can't imagine that number has changed too much in the past year.
Re:Silly article. (Score:2)
the nsa has top talent, infinite cash, infinite resources (like, gimme your best nuclear sub for a pet project, mr Navy Man.) while the us government's ability to waste money on ridiculous projects cannot be understated, when the nsa is involved, you gotta wonder what they really have up their sleeve.
Re:Silly article. (Score:2)
--Blair
Old news (Score:2)
Interesting that it's now being reported as something that's going to happen in the future. A little revisionist history may be at work, or maybe a reporter who hasn't really done his homework.
A sad fate for Carter (Score:4, Insightful)
This man's life is dedicated to peace, so they name a war machine after him. I know he was a nuke engineer and that is the reason for the dubbing.
Now that we are in a constant state of war, the USS Jimmy Carter will allow all messages of the enemy du jour to be intercepted [and modified] by the military industrial complex. Great
Re:A sad fate for Carter (Score:2, Interesting)
Former President Carter visited several submarines, including SSN 688, the Los Angeles [la-ex.org] . He was a nuclear power qualified submarine officer during his service in the Navy [navy.mil].
Given that history, I hardly think he was insulted when the boat was named after him.
Re:A sad fate for Carter (Score:2)
Oh no! They're stealing our routes! (Score:1, Funny)
Global Crossing's global route table is only the first step, next thing you know the Chinese will be invading PAIX and coked-up narco-columbians will be running rampant at the MAEs!
Sniff... (Score:2, Informative)
Sure, keeping terrorism, global crime, and child porn under control are part of it, but where does the line get drawn? If the US can tap these lines, what's to say that other countries aren't entitled to do the same? What's to say they aren't already?
I can understand the need for cyberintelligence and early warning, but I feel the need to bring up the issue of privacy in general. There's so little privacy on the 'net already, do we really need big brother watching what we do in even more depth?
Uncle Sam doesn't have the right to read my mail, but if the government is tapped into the global trunk, sniffing every packet, what's to say they won't read my e-mail, catalouge my credit cards, and track my information habits?
There is a line that must be drawn, and it should be drawn before it's too late.
Failsafe Business Opportunity ! (Score:4, Insightful)
I believe I have seen the light.
In a business climate such as this, where the US will bail out Global Crossing just to ensure that the business won't "fall into foreign hands", I think we, the slashdotters who are out to make a buck or two, should sit up and take attention !
1. Go set up your own underwater fibre cable laying / operating company.
2. Go to the banks and take BILLIONS and BILLIONS of loans.
3. Either by some existing money loosing underwater fiber cable operation, or lay some more cable on the already saturated routes.
4. If your business loose one USD on the operation, cook the book so that it looks like it's making one USD, and so on.
5. In the meantime, make yourself rich by pocketing a portion of the "difference", between the actual accounting, and the one the "cooked book" is showing. The rest of the difference, you can always invite Dick Cheney or whoever is from the Bush adminstration, to join your "Board of Directors", and let them pocket the rest of the loot.
6. Sooner or later, the "cookery" will be exposed. By that time, you would have BILLIONS in reserve, and you will have Dick Cheney and/or others from the Bush adminstration working FOR you, and covering up all your criminal act.
7. Under the guise of "national security", with the reason that your company is "too important to fall into foreign hands", the Bush adminstration will BUY UP YOUR CRUMBLED COMPANY, and they will PAY YOU A HANDSOME PROFIT too !
8. When you done all that, please don't forget www.slashdot.org. Donate some of your loot here, so all of us can continue to enjoy
Thank you very much for your attention.
PS: The above is for educational purpose only. Neither Slashdot nor I will assume any liability on anything, if you are stupid enough to do what I've just written above.
PPS: But of course, if you become richer than God, then, please, share your loot with all of us, thank you!
NSA may have already tapped fiber lines (Score:2)
The article was in the paper around a year ago and if you want to look it up you have to shell out $$$ for the online WSJ subscription that may have it archived.
Re:NSA may have already tapped fiber lines (Score:2)
Re:NSA may have already tapped fiber lines (Score:2)
Once an ISP with two international lines had outages.
ISP was told by Telco - some trawler broke one line, then a few hours later broke the other one.
OK maybe it was a trawler or the Telco...
Cheerio,
Link.
Tap this! (Score:2, Interesting)
Just in time, quantum cryptography [itworldcanada.com] for the masses.
A swiss company has recently announced a commercial product allowing a fiber optic channel to be secured with quantum cryptography; this would make tapping (without detection) impossible.
Of course, they could get meaner and ban anyone's right to secure outgoing fiber, which I suppose they would.
Re:Tap this! (Score:2)
Submarine naming conventions (Score:5, Funny)
USS Bill Clinton : The boat never seems to work quite the way everyone wants it too, and its outer hull is exceptionally slick. Easy to Catch, but tough to prove it really did something wrong.
USS Willaim Howard Taft : Big, unwieldy, Just kind of sits there and looks odd.
USS George Bush : Another spy ship along the lines of the Bill Clinton. A mistake in the shipyard causes the orders to say one thing and do another. Open switches close valves, and vice versa. Expected service life is only half that of a normal ship. Recently underwent minor modifications and re-entered service under the Name USS George W. Bush
USS Ronald Regan : Essentially useless as a spy ship as it sufffers continual memory errors. Those who served on the Regan however continue to tout the ship as the greatest ship in the inventory, asking monuments to it be built, and crediting the ship with single handedly winning every war since korea. the rest of the navy just rolls their eyes while waiting for it to be mothballed
USS Gerald Ford : Pressed into service after the scrapping of the USS Richard Nixon (removed from service after being too effective), The Ford has suffered from no less than 18 dry dock accidents, mostly relating to the ship rolling off the pillars used to support it.
Re:Submarine naming conventions (Score:2)
Homer: "Do we get to land on an aircraft carrier?"
Pilot: "No, Sir, the closest vessel in the USS Walter Mondale. It's a laundry ship."
Re:Submarine naming conventions (Score:2)
Re:Carlito Brigante (Score:2)
Additional Applications of Fiber Espionage (Score:2, Insightful)
IMHO, if tapping any communication medium will assist in the thwarting of terrorist activity, well we need something.
Noone would have considered this applicable 3 years ago.
Usually, with that size of budget, there are definately some dark ops. No wonder we (as in the U.S.) are developing methods to
Xray [state.sd.us] people as they wander through airports.
Someone to ask about the plans and what the impact will be is Secretary of the Navy Gordon England [navy.mil].
Understandably, I am sure he would not delve into the detailed tie-in and the way the Govt. is using 9/11 to move projects like thas ahead.
Crossing's Creditors' Committee press releases [globalcrossing.com] show how critical it was for the Govt to bail them out. With clients like
K.B. [globalcrossing.com] toys to sell their pipe to, it is amazing that they are not rolling in cash.
Stratgetically, there is concern because"For a very low price, someone is going to acquire a set of undersea fiber routes that crisscross the Atlantic and Pacific oceans and connect over 20 nations and perhaps resell or lease the network at a handsome profit to another party that could have its very own undersea communications network and training ground. The bankruptcy court had set April 23 as the deadline to receive proposals to take over the now-bankrupt GX.
It is a dark and stormy night... (Score:2, Funny)
*snip*
"Oops"
Hmm...Wonder what THAT fiber splicer would charge per hour?
Dont the Fiber have land baed nodes? (Score:2, Insightful)
Echelon (Score:3, Informative)
Jimmy Carter will kick your tush. (Score:5, Insightful)
The Jimmy Carter is too high value a ship to just keep out on fiber patrol- independent of her spec-ops function she can pretty much conventionally destroy most navies by herself thanks to that 50-weapon loadout, being quieter running at speed then the Los Angeles subs at dock, and that wide-aperture sonar. So making her a $3 billion dollar satellite feed doesn't make sense.
Therefore they must be planning to hook into the fiber-optic network, and spool off their own fiber line to a discrete uplink several hundred miles away. The upgrade must be to allow for all that equipment.
Re:Jimmy Carter will kick your tush. (Score:2)
Tech to do this has been around a long time (Score:2, Informative)
I had always assumed that the government made covert use of this technology. Who knows?
It's not plain SONET on those fibers... (Score:5, Informative)
One of the problems I see is that once the optical signal is inside the network, it's encoded in a special manner, diffferent for each equipment (to improve performance, add more error checking, force the carrier to continue to buy from the same vendor). So you can't just listen to it the same way as a phone line. What's in the fiber under the ocean is not as standard as what's on a copper line.
Also, how are you supposed to interpret it? Given a single wavelenght ans OC-192 speeds, it's 10Gb/s (bit, not byte). If you multiply by the maximum number of wavelengths that a fiber can carry (~160), you get 1600Gb/s. It begins to be a bit too much for the kind of computer that we can buy, although the NSA can probably afford it. But then, would they put it on a sub? Or relay the raw information to a ground station?
Other problem: sequential packets are not guaranteed to pass by the same fiber, or even the same carrier. There's probably a good chance that they do, but no guarantee ("We intercepted the following message: "The next target is S...". The rest went somewhere else. If you live in a city starting by S, please don't panic."). Unless they want to spy on privately owned fibers, where they're more sure to get all they want in that fiber...
Re:It's not plain SONET on those fibers... (Score:2, Interesting)
-Cruz
Re:It's not plain SONET on those fibers... (Score:2, Interesting)
Your assuming that those spying won't know the manner in which the signal is encrypted - but when Lucent, Nortel, Alcatel or good forbid Corvis will gladly sell you the box, this problem is much less severe. Buy the box, and reengineer it - or hell, just use it to do your deciphering! As for transmitting the data back to be decrypted - they'd probably just run a cable back to shore. Not that hard - but a little time consuming. But not what they are likely to do.
What they are much more likely to do than any harebrained fiber cabletaping scheme (at least for commercial cable - governmental would be different) is to tap the cable when it comes to ground - at the comshack with the amplifiers, etc. This is orders of magnitude less difficult, and much less likely to be damaged. More than likely the NSA already has for all of the cables leaving the US.
The fish.
This is just FUD (Score:4, Informative)
Also, tapping the repeaters is no problem, and in the Echelon discussion, at least one photo of a US submarine designed explicitly for installing taps on submarine cables and repeaters was publicized.
There is no reason to believe that the submarine cables aren't tapped by every major secret service. And even if they weren't, the points where the cables leave the sea and the major routers, POTS switches and exchange points are tapped.
Also, the paragraph about Global Crossing is bogus or even a Red Herring. Nobody in their right mind would rely on a line not being tapped, especially an international line. Their lines leave the sea to enter Europe or whatever country somewhere, and you can be sure that they are tapped there by the respective country and their allies.
Have you ever seen a fibre cable in the dark... (Score:2)
Or do I just have really, really, bad fibre?
Nothing new (Score:2)
This is pretty old news. A submarine seems overly complicated. I suspect the story is FUD.
Re:Who would use this to communicate? (Score:2)
Traffic analysis. Knowing who's talking to whom, and when and where, is often more valuable than the contents of the message itself.
-Isaac