In the latest salvo between the Syrian government and opposition forces, the government has reportedly used its control over Syria's telecommunications infrastructure to completely cut off the nation's Internet access. (The shut off can be seen in Renesys' Internet traffic graph for Syria, showing the complete cessation of all globally reachable Syrian networks between 10:20 and 10:30 UTC on November 29th:
In response, other nations and companies have stepped in to try to provide at least limited connectivity to Syrians. Google has reactivated its Speak2Tweet service, although the limited telephone service in Syria may reduce its usefulness, and the U.S. State Department announced that it had previously provided 2,000 communications kits, with computers, telephones and cameras, that are "designed to be independent from and able to circumvent the Syrian
domestic network precisely for the reason of keeping them safe, keeping
them secure from regime tampering, regime listening, regime interruption."
Beyond the clear local and geopolitical aspects, this latest governmental cutoff of Internet access, as with the outages caused by recent storms in the United States, highlights that the telecommunications infrastructure on which businesses depend is largely out of their control. Effective risk management, involving backup systems, contracts, insurance and other means, must take that reality (and its potential implications) into account.
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