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Silver Rocket Bitches!
29th November 2012, 08:53 PM
Syrian Internet Is Off The Air
By James Cowie on November 29, 2012 8:31 AM| No Comments (http://www.renesys.com/blog/2012/11/syria-off-the-air.shtml#comments)| 3 TrackBacks (http://www.renesys.com/blog/2012/11/syria-off-the-air.shtml#trackbacks)
Click for latest update: 01:00 GMT Friday. (http://gold-silver.us/forum/#latest)
Starting at 10:26 UTC on Thursday, 29 November (12:26pm in Damascus), Syria's international Internet connectivity shut down (http://www.renesys.com/eventsbulletin/2012/11/SY-1354184790.html). In the global routing table, all 84 of Syria's IP address blocks have become unreachable, effectively removing the country from the Internet.

We are investigating the dynamics of the outage and will post updates as they become available.

Update (15:45 UTC)


Looking closely at the continuing Internet blackout in Syria, we can see that traceroutes into Syria are failing, exactly as one would expect for a major outage. The primary autonomous system for Syria is the Syrian Telecommunications Establishment; all of their customer networks are currently unreachable.


Now, there are a few Syrian networks that are still connected to the Internet, still reachable by traceroutes, and indeed still hosting Syrian content. These are five networks that use Syrian-registered IP space, but the originator of the routes is actually Tata Communications. These are potentially offshore, rather than domestic, and perhaps not subject to whatever killswitch was thrown today within Syria.


These five offshore survivors include the webservers that were implicated in the delivery of malware targeting Syrian activists (https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2012/05/fake-skype-encryption-tool-targeted-syrian-activists-promises-security-delivers) in May of this year.

http://www.renesys.com/blog/2012/11/syria-off-the-air.shtml

vacuum
29th November 2012, 09:10 PM
These little blackouts are nice. They cause people to realize that the cheap, fast, and centralized networking systems that we use today are also easily controlled. When they exert their power to stop communications, it causes an awareness to grow that alternate independent data pipes are valuable and worth something, even if they aren't necessarily the cheapest or fastest option.

Neuro
30th November 2012, 10:15 AM
The question is; Was it Syria that disconnected the internet, or did someone do it for Syria?

mick silver
30th November 2012, 12:15 PM
it coming here one day , when enough people ask why is this going on and how did they rob us so bad . one day we all will see the same show