Between the Lines

Larry Dignan, Andrew Nusca and Rachel King

Fiber sabotage reward jumps; more damage discovered

By | April 10, 2009, 3:24pm PDT

If there were a show called CSI: Silicon Valley, this could be the pilot episode. It appears that the Case of the Silicon Valley Fiber Line Cuts has taken a few more turns today.

First, AT&T has upped its reward to $250,000 - not even 24 hours after the company announced a $100,000 reward. You know what that means, right? AT&T is not even playing around when it comes to catching the bad guy(s) behind this fiber optic tampering. Even a loyal mother would sell out her son for a quarter-million dollars, dontcha think?

Second, it appears that another set of cuts has been discovered - and this one was in a manhole just a couple of hundred yards from the first incident in San Jose.

Hmmm. Coincidence? AT&T’s official word is that the incidents - three incidents involving ten cables in two cities - are related acts of vandalism. But you have to wonder if there’s something more organized at work.

Also see: Our fancy Internet infrastructure operates on a wire and a prayer

Why can’t it just be random? Because fiber optic lines don’t just randomly get cut in different locations - all near each other, right around the same time but in four different manholes.

Years ago, I went down into a manhole in San Jose while reporting a newspaper story about a major cut to the copper lines during a construction mishap. It was like a concrete tunnel down there and the walls were lined with cables thick and thin and of many different colors. And it wasn’t just the phone company who had wires down there. So many other utilities had cables and wires and big pipes down there, too. The only reason I knew which ones were the copper lines is because the crew was working on them. Otherwise, no average Joe would know what’s down there.

OK, maybe you could blame some random punk who got bored with spray painting his name on  freeway signs and decided, on a dare, to go down into the manhole and start cutting random wires. But what are the chances that some punk kid would know enough to cut fiber optic lines that would take down landline phones, Internet connections and cell phone signals and impact data centers in or near the technology capital of the world?

It seems pretty clear - at least to me - that these cuts were made by someone who knew what was down there and knew just where to cut. If that person confided in anyone else about what he or she was going to doing, a nice $250,000 reward might be just enough incentive for that person to pick up the phone and start coughing up some information.

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Sam has been a technology and business blogger for more than 18 years.

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Sam Diaz

Sam Diaz has nothing to disclose.

Biography

Sam Diaz

Sam has been a technology and business blogger, reporter and editor at ZDNet, the Washington Post, San Jose Mercury News and Fresno Bee for more than 18 years. He's a member of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists and a graduate of California State University, Fresno.

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RE: Fiber sabotage reward jumps; more damage discovered
videopoker online 6th Sep
Altogether The Associate be familiar with, online slots after that that be able to carry out a lot of advantage but you accomplish it consistently.
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250K
algzdnet Updated - 10th Apr 2009
It would need to be tax FREE before I'd turn my kid in, so I would'nt need to pay for anymore bank Bailouts.

PSST: And a Free liftime subscription for a Blackberry G3(or better)with all of the goodies.
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Disgruntled employee?
John Zern Updated - 10th Apr 2009
Knowing what cables are fiber and what is just copper or useless does kind of wonder if the person had first hand knowledge of which where which.

Like maybe the guy who laid them or repaired them?
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... or
johnfenjackson@... 11th Apr 2009
... disgruntled ex-employee sad
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Let's just hope.
kozmcrae 10th Apr 2009
That these acts of sabotage are the work of someone/some group of individuals hoping to extort money from AT&T. Or possibly it's the act of a lone religious fanatic who believes the Internet is evil.

My other theory is that the attacks could be a test run for a larger, wide scale attack on our communications infrastructure. I'm hoping it's the religious fanatic.
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Let's just hope... it's not.
nadatu 15th Apr 2009
knowing precisely what to cut and where to cut... and the attack is targeted specific to AT&T! the same thing came to my mind - a test run for something bigger. Now that is scary! let's hope it's not.
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So, who else has got fiber cables underground ?
It just might be that a union tech with AT&T is trying to send a message to the corporate negotiators currently involved in contract talks with the union. Anyone who knows someone at AT&T knows that they are training sales staff to do the tech jobs just in case the union does go on strike. I'd say this gets the message across pretty loud and clear.
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I'm betting that's what it was
Lerianis 11th Apr 2009
A disgruntled amployee or ex-employee who decided to 'get some payback'. That is the ONLY way to explain why ALL the wires in these manholes were not cut.
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Like unlimited cell phone use for life and any cell phone they ever sell ever whenever you want.

A cell phone a week with unlimited hours!

Yeah
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A Good Lesson
ParrotHeadFL 13th Apr 2009
The good news is that this event, which was painful but could've been much worse, is drawing attention to the insecurity of the physical infrastructure of the Internet.

The notion that just anyone could open a manhole and have access to these cables is pretty frightening.
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Who and why are the important questions
rdhalsteatzd 13th Apr 2009
I see references made to possible individuals, but from what I read this had to be a number of people that knew what to look for and what it'd do.

I've seen comments on other forums about the cell towers going down and how important they are. Unfortunately those are about the first thing to fail in disasters. The phone companies do not consider them important enough to have more than a few hours of backup power available and it doesn't take much to saturate them to where they become useless.

maybe this should wake up uncle sam to get ready for a fight on this land and country.

i personaly beleive the people who took down the towers in new york are still here and in large number just waiting, cut a load of cables at the same time,at the right spots, this country will go down. in a instent.

our cables are just to easy to get at and bring us down. most are not guarded. att and the others best start welding those covers down. and do that NOW!
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Altogether The Associate be familiar with, online slots after that that be able to carry out a lot of advantage but you accomplish it consistently.

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