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Industry : Technology Consulting Functional Area : New Technologies
Activity:  1 comments  184 views  last activity : 07 06 2010 20:18:04 +0000
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The fiber-optic outage—actually sabotage—in the Bay Area on Thursday reveals a dirty little secret: Our infrastructure is ridiculously vulnerable and it only takes a few vandals (or terrorists) to bring communication to its knees.

While it’s unclear what exactly happened, AT&T is offering a $100,000 now $250,000 reward to find the vandals that cut into fiber optic wires and whacked everything from hosting centers—including a few of our own—911 calls and other communication (Techmeme). Sam said it best: No matter how advanced we get we’re still hooked up to a big wire somewhere.

That’s not going to change. The big question: How are we going to protect those big wires?

Barrett Lyon asks whether it’s possible to destroy the network with a hacksaw. In a word: Yup. It happened yesterday. AT&T used Twitter—home of the Fail Whale—to communicate with customers. Anyone see the irony in that one?

What’s truly scary is that we’re not just talking about the Internet here. The electric grid is vulnerable. Our transportation grid is vulnerable. Our infrastructure in the U.S. is a big sitting duck. The grid and the Internet are top of mind today, but I’m reminded of the overall infrastructure vulnerability every trip into Penn Station. Every once in a while you’ll see heavily armed police with their K-9 dogs in Penn Station’s lobby. It’s a common sight. However, if you really wanted to bring down the train station and subway it’s nothing a stray backpack couldn’t take care of.

Simply put, it’s impossible to completely secure all of the infrastructure out there. And everyone knows it. In 2003, a student dissertation raised national security concerns. It’s not rocket science to map infrastructure and cook up scenarios.

So what can we do?

Surely, it makes no sense to put armed guards at every manhole cover, fiber optic hub, power line and transportation grid. However, there may be a few things we can do:

  • Seal the manholes: It’s relatively easy to pop one and clip a line or two.
  • Smart sensors: Is there the equivalent of a car alarm for fiber optic lines?
  • Better surveillance: Critical national infrastructure—like the places the AT&T fiber optic lines were cut—mostly resides in private hands. Is there a way to hook these areas up into a national security monitoring network?
  • Improved fail-over processes. Sure, the Internet is set up to reroute traffic, but it’s not perfect. Can we build in more resiliency?
There is a big plan from the Department of Homeland Security about protecting national infrastructure. The 188 page tome can be boiled down to this graphic.

In the end, I’m not hopeful that any of these infrastructure assets can be secured because there’s a real herding cats problem among all the vested parties. And that fact casts a pall over some of our grand tech visions.

 Top Comment : Abraham Paul   | 04 30 2009 08:31:24 +0000
The MTBF (Mean Time Between Failures) and MTTR (Minimum Time To Restore) are common terms applicable to every element in the device, network and even in the human body. If the MTBF of a critical component is 100 years and if there are 1000 such components in the system, the overall MTTF of the system is 0.1 year, meaning that the system may experience breakdown every month. The only way out is to have enough redundancy built in the system taking into consideration of the MTTF and MTTR. In network planning, it is a practice to have alternate routes which share the traffic so that failure of one route will not cause total break down. For the communication networks, which normally works over OF links, terrestrial and wireless links there shall be alternate paths on shared traffic basis and automatic alternate routing in case of overflow and rout failures. In case of sensitive links and control circuits, there shall be minimum support links through satellite media to keep the link up during natural calamities.
 
1 comments on "AT&T fiber outage shows how easily attackers could wipe out our communications -Larry Dignan "
  Commented by  Abraham Paul, CEO/MD/Director, FCOMNET    | 04 30 2009 08:31:24 +0000
Rating : +1 
The MTBF (Mean Time Between Failures) and MTTR (Minimum Time To Restore) 
are common terms applicable to every element in the 
device, network and even in the human body. 
If the MTBF of a critical component is 100 years and if there
are 1000 such components in the system, the overall MTTF of 
the system is 0.1 year, meaning that the system may experience breakdown
every month.  
The only way out is to have enough redundancy built in the 
system taking into consideration of the MTTF and MTTR. 
In network planning, it is a practice to have alternate routes
which share the traffic so that failure of one route will not cause total break down.
For the communication networks, which normally works over OF links, terrestrial and 
wireless links there shall be  alternate paths on shared traffic basis and automatic 
alternate routing in case of overflow and rout failures. In case of sensitive links 
and control circuits, there shall be minimum support links through satellite
media to keep the link up during natural calamities. 

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