What happened in Syria this week — a wholesale disconnection from the
Internet — could happen anywhere. But it’s more likely to happen in
some countries than others.
The web services firm Renesys often analyzes that risk
— for, say, companies that are deciding which countries might make good
hosts for data centers. And, in light of the Syria situation, it has
conducted “a census, from our own view of the global Internet routing
table, of all the domestic providers in each country who have direct
connections (visible in routing) to foreign providers.” Using that
information, the firm created the chart below.
The illustration here is mostly unsurprising: Syria, Libya, Tunisia,
Myanmar — countries led by volatile and/or autocratic regimes — are the
most at-risk, while (relatively) stable democracies and commonwealths
like the U.S. Canada, and European nations are relatively resistant to
blackout.
The most common risk factor, unsurprisingly, is centralization. A
robust Internet architecture is a distributed Internet architecture —
one with built-in redundancies and, crucially, one that is modular
enough to prevent the kill-switch capabilities that can empower bad
actors to act badly. “The key to the Internet’s survival is the
Internet’s decentralization,” the Renesys report notes, “and it’s not
uniform across the world.”
Regulation is another risk factor. Per Renesys:
In some countries, international access to data and
telecommunications services is heavily regulated. There may be only one
or two companies who hold official licenses to carry voice and Internet
traffic to and from the outside world, and they are required by law to
mediate access for everyone else.
Under those circumstances, it’s almost trivial for a government to
issue an order that would take down the Internet. Make a few phone
calls, or turn off power in a couple of central facilities, and you’ve
(legally) disconnected the domestic Internet from the global Internet.
Of course, this level of centralization also makes it much harder for
the government to defend the nation’s Internet infrastructure against a
determined opponent, who knows they can do a lot of damage by hitting
just a few targets.
So the chart is based on diversity. And based on criteria and observations like these:
- If you have only one or two companies at your international
frontier, we classify your country as being at severe risk of Internet
disconnection.
- If you have fewer than 10 service providers at your international
frontier, your country is probably exposed to some significant risk of
Internet disconnection.
- If you have more than 10 internationally-connected service
providers, but fewer than about 40, your risk of disconnection is fairly
low.
- Finally, if you have more than 40 providers at your frontier, your
country is likely to be extremely resistant to Internet disconnection.
These are fairly common-sense. But it’s good to put numbers behind
risk, and nice to be reminded of how varied the world’s Internet
infrastructure is. And, specifically, how fragile connection is for so
many countries. This is something, Renesys points out, that will likely
be a subject of discussion at next week’s World Conference on International Telecommunications.
Though discussion, of course, won’t itself lead to improvement.
“Without some strong legal prodding and guidance from the telecoms
regulator,” Renesys notes, “significant diversification in smaller
markets with a strong incumbent can take a long, long time.”
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