Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-29 Thread Tim Pozar
I pretended to be a Russian diplomat today.
Tim

 On 6/3/17 12:13 PM, Matthew Petach wrote:
> On Fri, Jun 2, 2017 at 11:40 AM,   wrote:
> [...]
>>
>> Well, I'd be willing to buy that logic, except the specific buildings called
>> out look pretty damned big for just drying off a cable.  For example, this
>> is claimed to be the US landing point for TAT-14 - looks around 4K square 
>> feet?
>
> I think you might be off by an order of magnitude or two
> on that.  4,000 sq ft is about the size of the guest bathroom
> in Snowhorn's new house, isn't it?
>
> (well, OK, maybe a slight exaggeration...  ;)
>
> Matt



Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-11 Thread Gordon Cook
I have just scanned this whole thread - it is the most amazing analysis of 
technical details I have e ver seen

national security also
sean I am taking this in the sense of what the hell could these russian 
diplomats be doing?

I have been a nanog reader  since this list began   in the spring of 1995 i 
believe

remember i am parsing comments from the russian side as well
 
 i met aleksei soldatov at the kurchatov institute for the first time in april 
1992.  about 3 days earlier i met  the demos guys who  told soldatov   
suggested to soldatov that  he  should met me  at kurchatov 

I followed the development of the russian internet very closely between April 
1992 and 1999  not much after that.

meanwhile i am
well aware of international fiber optic cables geographic issues of same  — see 
telegeography for example,  His coordinates etc
 interception  of cable via submarine etc

see the US Sub named Jimmy  carter

I visited Russia for the first time in 1964  
my dissertation completed in 1972

dis on site work for the Phd in Russia for 2 months summer of 1970
including pushkinskii Dom

Thanks to steve Goldstein of NSF I received an invite to attend the second Nato 
sponsored conference on the future e of   the  russian internet  met larry land 
weber there at Golitsyno - the conf  was sept 30 to Oct 2 1994 

The point?  I have long experience with my Cook Report on Internet Protocol  in 
April 1992 issue #1

and an even lon\ger experience  with russian history language and culture 

 I am also well aware this message will be readable by a ver large number of 
people both  here and abroad.

even visited the westin bldg In i think 1994.
 take a bow Sean!!

:-)



> On Jun 11, 2017, at 11:38 AM, Gordon Cook  wrote:
> 
> Hi Sean
> 
> You and I first met when i was at OIA about 1992   LOONG TIME ago
> 
> Always thought  of you as brilliant collector of info as well as analyst 
> there of 
> 
> this question of yours is absolutely brilliant
> 
> look at the responses (more) than 45!!!
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
>> On Jun 1, 2017, at 2:02 PM, Sean Donelan  wrote:
>> 
>> 
>> There must be a perfectly logical explanation  Yes, people in the 
>> industry know where the choke points are. But the choke points aren't always 
>> the most obvious places. Its kinda a weird for diplomats to show up there.
>> 
>> On the other hand, I've been a fiber optic tourist.  I've visited many 
>> critical choke points in the USA and other countries, and even took selfies 
>> :-)
>> 
>> 
>> http://www.politico.com/story/2017/06/01/russia-spies-espionage-trump-239003
>> 
>> In the throes of the 2016 campaign, the FBI found itself with an escalating 
>> problem: Russian diplomats, whose travel was supposed to be tracked by the 
>> State Department, were going missing.
>> 
>> The diplomats, widely assumed to be intelligence operatives, would 
>> eventually turn up in odd places, often in middle-of-nowhere USA. One was 
>> found on a beach, nowhere near where he was supposed to be. In one 
>> particularly bizarre case, relayed by a U.S. intelligence official, another 
>> turned up wandering around in the middle of the desert. Interestingly, both 
>> seemed to be lingering where underground fiber-optic cables tend to run.
>> 
>> According to another U.S. intelligence official, “They find these guys 
>> driving around in circles in Kansas. It’s a pretty aggressive effort.”
>> 
>> It’s a trend that has led intelligence officials to conclude that the 
>> Kremlin is waging a quiet effort to map the United States’ 
>> telecommunications infrastructure, perhaps preparing for an opportunity to 
>> disrupt it.
>> 
> 
> 



Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-11 Thread Gordon Cook
Hi Sean

You and I first met when i was at OIA about 1992   LOONG TIME ago

Always thought  of you as brilliant collector of info as well as analyst there 
of 

this question of yours is absolutely brilliant

look at the responses (more) than 45!!!






> On Jun 1, 2017, at 2:02 PM, Sean Donelan  wrote:
> 
> 
> There must be a perfectly logical explanation  Yes, people in the 
> industry know where the choke points are. But the choke points aren't always 
> the most obvious places. Its kinda a weird for diplomats to show up there.
> 
> On the other hand, I've been a fiber optic tourist.  I've visited many 
> critical choke points in the USA and other countries, and even took selfies 
> :-)
> 
> 
> http://www.politico.com/story/2017/06/01/russia-spies-espionage-trump-239003
> 
> In the throes of the 2016 campaign, the FBI found itself with an escalating 
> problem: Russian diplomats, whose travel was supposed to be tracked by the 
> State Department, were going missing.
> 
> The diplomats, widely assumed to be intelligence operatives, would eventually 
> turn up in odd places, often in middle-of-nowhere USA. One was found on a 
> beach, nowhere near where he was supposed to be. In one particularly bizarre 
> case, relayed by a U.S. intelligence official, another turned up wandering 
> around in the middle of the desert. Interestingly, both seemed to be 
> lingering where underground fiber-optic cables tend to run.
> 
> According to another U.S. intelligence official, “They find these guys 
> driving around in circles in Kansas. It’s a pretty aggressive effort.”
> 
> It’s a trend that has led intelligence officials to conclude that the Kremlin 
> is waging a quiet effort to map the United States’ telecommunications 
> infrastructure, perhaps preparing for an opportunity to disrupt it.
> 



Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-04 Thread Tom Hill
On 04/06/17 23:32, Rod Beck wrote:
> And when you get over trying to score cheap points, you can view the map

I'm not the one that needs to look at a map ;)


-- 
Tom


Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-04 Thread Rod Beck
And when you get over trying to score cheap points, you can view the map: 
http://www.kis-orca.eu/map#.WTSKGG4lHIU.




From: NANOG  on behalf of Tom Hill 

Sent: Monday, June 5, 2017 12:22:54 AM
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

On 01/06/17 20:44, Rod Beck wrote:
> There is a website showing where most of the Trans-Atlantic cables land on 
> the West Coast of Britain at towns like Bude in Wales. Hiding is not an 
> option.

Bude is in Cornwall, a county of England. It's not in Wales.

--
Tom


Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-04 Thread Rod Beck
Perfectly irrelevant, Tom. 😊


From: NANOG  on behalf of Tom Hill 

Sent: Monday, June 5, 2017 12:22:54 AM
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

On 01/06/17 20:44, Rod Beck wrote:
> There is a website showing where most of the Trans-Atlantic cables land on 
> the West Coast of Britain at towns like Bude in Wales. Hiding is not an 
> option.

Bude is in Cornwall, a county of England. It's not in Wales.

--
Tom


Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-04 Thread Tom Hill
On 01/06/17 20:44, Rod Beck wrote:
> There is a website showing where most of the Trans-Atlantic cables land on 
> the West Coast of Britain at towns like Bude in Wales. Hiding is not an 
> option.

Bude is in Cornwall, a county of England. It's not in Wales.

-- 
Tom


Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-03 Thread Matthew Petach
On Fri, Jun 2, 2017 at 11:40 AM,   wrote:
[...]
>
> Well, I'd be willing to buy that logic, except the specific buildings called
> out look pretty damned big for just drying off a cable.  For example, this
> is claimed to be the US landing point for TAT-14 - looks around 4K square 
> feet?

I think you might be off by an order of magnitude or two
on that.  4,000 sq ft is about the size of the guest bathroom
in Snowhorn's new house, isn't it?

(well, OK, maybe a slight exaggeration...  ;)

Matt


Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-03 Thread Hank Nussbacher
On 02/06/2017 19:46, valdis.kletni...@vt.edu wrote:
> On Fri, 02 Jun 2017 15:11:36 -, Rod Beck said:
>
>> Landing stations can be 10 to 30 kilometers from the beach manhole. I don't
>> think it is big concern. Hibernia Atlantic dublin landing station is a good
>> example.
> So 100% of those beach manholes are watertight and safe from flooding, and
> don't contain any gear that will get upset if it does in fact end up with
> salt water in there?
>
> This listing for landing points in Japan seems to call out a hell of a lot of
> specific buildings that are nowhere near 10 to 30 km inland:
> https://www.google.com/maps/d/viewer?mid=1Siy5qBMoFyBUlSFNHdHDpGAkIR0
>
> Singapore: Right on the water.
> http://www.streetdirectory.com/sg/singapore-cable-landing-station/1-changi-north-rise-498817/8118_79569.html
>
> Hong Kong:  More of same (though with its hills, some of the 8 sites may
> actually be a bit above sea level even though they're 2 blocks from water)
> http://www.ofca.gov.hk/en/industry_focus/telecommunications/facility_based/infrastructures/submarine_cables/index.html
>
> Cryptome has a bunch of older images that tend to indicate that a lot of
> buildings right on the water in New Jersey and Long Island are involved:
> https://cryptome.org/eyeball/cable/cable-eyeball.htm
>
> And that's just in the first 3 pages returned by Google for "cable landing 
> station
> map".
>
> The experience of the Manhattan phone system when the conduits and basements
> flooded during Sandy tends to indicate that we *are* in for similar
> surprises over the coming decades.

I think you are missing the point.  The issue is not the actual landing
station but the actual *exact *path the cable takes from 100meter out at
sea to the landing station.  For that you need GPS coordinates down to a
3' level as the fiber snakes its way from shore into the city.   I do
not believe that is available on the Internet and is only available to
the actual company that laid the cable.  One can try to deduce the path
by looking for manhole covers but that would require opening and
physically inspecting.

-Hank




Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-02 Thread Rod Beck
The plan is to decommission TAT-14 in 2024. That is long before the next 
Biblical Flood due the ice caps melting. The Trans-Atlantic systems have a life 
span at best of 30 years. When the next set of systems is built rising waters 
will be taken into account.


From: Valdis Kletnieks  on behalf of valdis.kletni...@vt.edu 

Sent: Friday, June 2, 2017 8:40 PM
To: Christopher Morrow
Cc: Rod Beck; nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

On Fri, 02 Jun 2017 13:23:26 -0400, Christopher Morrow said:
> is this a case of 'wherer the cable gets dry' vs 'where the electronics
> doing cable things lives' ?
> aren't (normally) the dry equipment locations a bit inland and then have
> last-mile services from the consortium members headed inland to their
> respective network pops?

Well, I'd be willing to buy that logic, except the specific buildings called
out look pretty damned big for just drying off a cable.  For example, this
is claimed to be the US landing point for TAT-14 - looks around 4K square feet?

http://virtualglobetrotting.com/map/tuckerton-cable-landing-station/view/google/
[http://khm0.googleapis.com/kh?v=726&hl=en-US&x=307790&y=398428&z=20]<http://virtualglobetrotting.com/map/tuckerton-cable-landing-station/view/google/>

Tuckerton Cable Landing Station in Tuckerton, NJ (Google 
...<http://virtualglobetrotting.com/map/tuckerton-cable-landing-station/view/google/>
virtualglobetrotting.com
Tuckerton Cable Landing Station (Google Maps). Tuckerton Cable Landing Station 
hosts the TAT-14 fibre cable which runs 15,000km to...



Though I admit I'm foggy on how much gear is needed to stuff however many amps
at 4,000 volts down the cable core to power the repeaters.  But again - if
there's gear stuffing that many amps at that many volts down a cable, salt
water could be the start of a bad day...

(And note - I'm not saying that *everybody* who built a cable landing station
managed to get it wrong.  I'm saying that with the number of landing stations
in existence, the chance that *somebody* got it wrong is probably scarily high.
Telco and internet experiences in New Orleans during Katrina and NYC during
Sandy suggest there's a lot of infrastructure built with "we never had storm
surge in this building before so it can't happen" planning)


Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-02 Thread valdis . kletnieks
On Fri, 02 Jun 2017 13:23:26 -0400, Christopher Morrow said:
> is this a case of 'wherer the cable gets dry' vs 'where the electronics
> doing cable things lives' ?
> aren't (normally) the dry equipment locations a bit inland and then have
> last-mile services from the consortium members headed inland to their
> respective network pops?

Well, I'd be willing to buy that logic, except the specific buildings called
out look pretty damned big for just drying off a cable.  For example, this
is claimed to be the US landing point for TAT-14 - looks around 4K square feet?

http://virtualglobetrotting.com/map/tuckerton-cable-landing-station/view/google/

Though I admit I'm foggy on how much gear is needed to stuff however many amps
at 4,000 volts down the cable core to power the repeaters.  But again - if
there's gear stuffing that many amps at that many volts down a cable, salt
water could be the start of a bad day...

(And note - I'm not saying that *everybody* who built a cable landing station
managed to get it wrong.  I'm saying that with the number of landing stations
in existence, the chance that *somebody* got it wrong is probably scarily high.
Telco and internet experiences in New Orleans during Katrina and NYC during
Sandy suggest there's a lot of infrastructure built with "we never had storm
surge in this building before so it can't happen" planning)


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Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-02 Thread Eric Kuhnke
It is no longer in the Westin, or if they've kept an office space it is not
the public facing consulate. The security desk at the lobby frequently has
to deal with confused Russian consular-service seeking people who don't
want to take "no" for an answer when they're told that the consulate has
moved.

new address: 600 University St #2510, Seattle, WA 98101

On Thu, Jun 1, 2017 at 7:15 PM, Joe Hamelin  wrote:

> The Seattle Russian Embassy is in the Westin Building just 4 floors above
> the fiber meet-me-room and five floors above the NRO tap room.  They use to
> come ask us (an ISP) for IT help back in '96 when they would drag an icon
> too far off the screen in Windows 3.11. We were on the same floor.
>
> --
> Joe Hamelin, W7COM, Tulalip, WA, +1 (360) 474-7474
>
> On Thu, Jun 1, 2017 at 6:08 PM, Brandon Vincent 
> wrote:
>
> > On Thu, Jun 1, 2017 at 6:07 PM, Matt Palmer  wrote:
> > > I think regardless of what you appear to be interested in, hanging
> > around a
> > > beach with a big DSLR is likely to get you on one list or another.
> >
> > "Excuse me, sir! Can you direct us to the naval base in Alameda? It's
> > where they keep the nuclear wessels."
> >
>


Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-02 Thread Ben McGinnes
On Fri, Jun 02, 2017 at 05:52:43PM +0300, Denys Fedoryshchenko wrote:
>
> https://www.nanog.org/list
> 6. Postings of political, philosophical, and legal nature are prohibited.
> It is quite clear.

That's a fair point.

The crypto dev world does have a tendency to veer into two of those
three (political and legal) with a little more regularity, usually by
necessity.  So I do tend to weave in and out of those "off" topics
without getting too hung up on the creeping FUD in some quarters.  At
times they'll even have practical requirements which need addressing;
which is why somewhere in one of my GPGME branches there's a completed
ITAR questionairre - definitely political, very legal and absolutely
required in order to continue the technical work at all.

I'd be surprised if there were not similar types of issues affecting
some aspects of various networks.  Most likely pertaining to
international routes and even more likely subject to confidentiality
agreements of various types (not just everyone's favourite bugbear of
national security).

> I do not deny networks sometimes are deeply affected by political
> factors, but current discussion is pure FUD, based on very
> questionable MSM source.  IMHO any sane person wont like to receive
> this trash in his mailbox in list, that supposed to be
> politics-free, as there is enough of this garbage in internet.

And it's the role of NANOG to make sure all that FUD gets where the
conspiracists intended it to go.  Isn't it great ... :)

> Thanks for the hint, fixed, i use this domain only for old maillist
> subscriptions,
> so i missed that, after i migrated SMTP to my private server.

I entirely understand, I've been tweaking mine a fair bit recently,
weighing up the local Postfix instance vs. not having as great a
control over the network as I'd like and ultimately deciding to run it
all through the MX.  I noticed it because I was double-checking return
headers to be sure my own systems are doing, more or less, what
they're supposed to.  Especially since the current MX is set the way
it is for technical, legal and political reasons (basically the mail
server is in a jurisdiction with *far* greater privacy protections
than my own country).


Regards,
Ben


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Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-02 Thread Christopher Morrow
On Fri, Jun 2, 2017 at 12:46 PM,  wrote:

> On Fri, 02 Jun 2017 15:11:36 -, Rod Beck said:
>
> > Landing stations can be 10 to 30 kilometers from the beach manhole. I
> don't
> > think it is big concern. Hibernia Atlantic dublin landing station is a
> good
> > example.
>
> So 100% of those beach manholes are watertight and safe from flooding, and
> don't contain any gear that will get upset if it does in fact end up with
> salt water in there?
>
> This listing for landing points in Japan seems to call out a hell of a lot
> of
> specific buildings that are nowhere near 10 to 30 km inland:
> https://www.google.com/maps/d/viewer?mid=1Siy5qBMoFyBUlSFNHdHDpGAkIR0
>
> Singapore: Right on the water.
> http://www.streetdirectory.com/sg/singapore-cable-
> landing-station/1-changi-north-rise-498817/8118_79569.html
>
> Hong Kong:  More of same (though with its hills, some of the 8 sites may
> actually be a bit above sea level even though they're 2 blocks from water)
> http://www.ofca.gov.hk/en/industry_focus/telecommunications/facility_
> based/infrastructures/submarine_cables/index.html
>
> Cryptome has a bunch of older images that tend to indicate that a lot of
> buildings right on the water in New Jersey and Long Island are involved:
> https://cryptome.org/eyeball/cable/cable-eyeball.htm
>
>
is this a case of 'wherer the cable gets dry' vs 'where the electronics
doing cable things lives' ?
aren't (normally) the dry equipment locations a bit inland and then have
last-mile services from the consortium members headed inland to their
respective network pops?


> And that's just in the first 3 pages returned by Google for "cable landing
> station
> map".
>
> The experience of the Manhattan phone system when the conduits and
> basements
> flooded during Sandy tends to indicate that we *are* in for similar
> surprises over the coming decades.
>


Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-02 Thread Christopher Morrow
On Fri, Jun 2, 2017 at 12:49 AM, Joe Hamelin  wrote:

> Christopher asks: 'nro tap room' ... what's the expansion of NRO here?
>
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Reconnaissance_Office
>
>
I'm unsure why the NRO would have a room doing tap things in anyone's
network.
that is not their remit. Certianly we can FUD all day long about black
helicopters, but in this case the NRO is a red herring.

perhaps you meant NSA? and something akin to the ATT SF room-2
thing?

-chris


Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-02 Thread valdis . kletnieks
On Fri, 02 Jun 2017 15:11:36 -, Rod Beck said:

> Landing stations can be 10 to 30 kilometers from the beach manhole. I don't
> think it is big concern. Hibernia Atlantic dublin landing station is a good
> example.

So 100% of those beach manholes are watertight and safe from flooding, and
don't contain any gear that will get upset if it does in fact end up with
salt water in there?

This listing for landing points in Japan seems to call out a hell of a lot of
specific buildings that are nowhere near 10 to 30 km inland:
https://www.google.com/maps/d/viewer?mid=1Siy5qBMoFyBUlSFNHdHDpGAkIR0

Singapore: Right on the water.
http://www.streetdirectory.com/sg/singapore-cable-landing-station/1-changi-north-rise-498817/8118_79569.html

Hong Kong:  More of same (though with its hills, some of the 8 sites may
actually be a bit above sea level even though they're 2 blocks from water)
http://www.ofca.gov.hk/en/industry_focus/telecommunications/facility_based/infrastructures/submarine_cables/index.html

Cryptome has a bunch of older images that tend to indicate that a lot of
buildings right on the water in New Jersey and Long Island are involved:
https://cryptome.org/eyeball/cable/cable-eyeball.htm

And that's just in the first 3 pages returned by Google for "cable landing 
station
map".

The experience of the Manhattan phone system when the conduits and basements
flooded during Sandy tends to indicate that we *are* in for similar
surprises over the coming decades.


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Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-02 Thread Rod Beck
Landing stations can be 10 to 30 kilometers from the beach manhole. I don't 
think it is big concern. Hibernia Atlantic dublin landing station is a good 
example.



From: NANOG  on behalf of valdis.kletni...@vt.edu 

Sent: Friday, June 2, 2017 5:04 PM
To: aheb...@pubnix.net
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

On Fri, 02 Jun 2017 10:14:12 -0400, Alain Hebert said:
>  It will if the Ocean level change drastically.

Raising the question - how well protected against sea level rise *is* the
average cable landing/termination station, given that most landing stations in
particular are probably fairly near the beach and not very high above sea
level?   Are there any in particular that we need to worry if another Hurricane
Sandy or local equivalent wanders by?



Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-02 Thread valdis . kletnieks
On Fri, 02 Jun 2017 10:14:12 -0400, Alain Hebert said:
>  It will if the Ocean level change drastically.

Raising the question - how well protected against sea level rise *is* the
average cable landing/termination station, given that most landing stations in
particular are probably fairly near the beach and not very high above sea
level?   Are there any in particular that we need to worry if another Hurricane
Sandy or local equivalent wanders by?



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Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-02 Thread Denys Fedoryshchenko

On 2017-06-02 12:19, Ben McGinnes wrote:

On Fri, Jun 02, 2017 at 10:28:38AM +0300, Denys Fedoryshchenko wrote:


American diplomats are doing also all sort of nasty stuff in
Russia(and not only),


Yes they have and for a very long time.


but that's a concern of the equivalent of FBI/NSA/etc, not operators
public discussion places, unless it really affect operators anyhow.
Just amazing, how NANOG slipped into pure politics.


The network(s) have been political for a very long time and will only
become more so as time passes.  Remember, the engineers wishing for
the purity of technical discussion are usually the same ones crying
that, "information wants to be free."

https://www.nanog.org/list
6. Postings of political, philosophical, and legal nature are 
prohibited.

It is quite clear.

I do not deny networks sometimes are deeply affected by political 
factors,
but current discussion is pure FUD, based on very questionable MSM 
source.
IMHO any sane person wont like to receive this trash in his mailbox in 
list,
that supposed to be politics-free, as there is enough of this garbage in 
internet.
I do discuss such things too, when i have mood for that, but in 
designated places only.




Well, no matter.  You want purely technical, okay, let's start with
authorised mail hosts.

You need to add 144.76.183.226/32 to the SPF record for visp.net.lb,
which is currently triggering softfails everywhere.  It might be wise
to explicitly state whether or not it is just 144.76.183.226/32 in the
SPF record for nuclearcat.com given the deny all instruction for that
domain.
Thanks for the hint, fixed, i use this domain only for old maillist 
subscriptions,

so i missed that, after i migrated SMTP to my private server.


Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-02 Thread Alain Hebert

It will if the Ocean level change drastically.

Which with this week news cycle...  might not be that far fetched =D>

-
Alain Hebertaheb...@pubnix.net
PubNIX Inc.
50 boul. St-Charles
P.O. Box 26770 Beaconsfield, Quebec H9W 6G7
Tel: 514-990-5911  http://www.pubnix.netFax: 514-990-9443

On 06/01/17 15:54, Sean Donelan wrote:

On Thu, 1 Jun 2017, Rod Beck wrote:
As someone who has sold a lot of capacity on Hibernia Atlantic, I 
must concur. There is a website showing where most of the 
Trans-Atlantic cables land on the West Coast of Britain at towns like 
Bude in Wales. Hiding is not an option.


As far as I know, there are no cable landing stations in Kansas.

Has US geography changed recently?







Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-02 Thread Donald Eastlake
On Thu, Jun 1, 2017 at 10:15 PM, Joe Hamelin  wrote:
>
> The Seattle Russian Embassy is in the Westin Building just 4 floors above
> the fiber meet-me-room ...

The only real Russian Embassy in the US is in Washington where their
Ambassador is stationed, although arguably their UN Office in NYC has
the status of am Embassy. Embassies have to do with international
diplomacy. Their Seattle office is a consulate, which is what most
people deal with for passports, visas, import/export permits, and
similar personal/commercial stuff rather than diplomatic stuff.
Commonly the Embassy of a country is also a consulate or, as it is
sometimes described, has a consular affairs branch.
See http://www.russianembassy.org/page/russian-consulates-in-the-u-s

Thanks,
Donald
=
 Donald E. Eastlake 3rd   +1-508-333-2270 (cell)
 155 Beaver Street, Milford, MA 01757 USA
 d3e...@gmail.com

> --
> Joe Hamelin, W7COM, Tulalip, WA, +1 (360) 474-7474


Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-02 Thread Joe Hamelin
Christopher asks: 'nro tap room' ... what's the expansion of NRO here?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Reconnaissance_Office

--
Joe Hamelin, W7COM, Tulalip, WA, +1 (360) 474-7474


Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-02 Thread Ben McGinnes
On Fri, Jun 02, 2017 at 10:28:38AM +0300, Denys Fedoryshchenko wrote:
>
> American diplomats are doing also all sort of nasty stuff in
> Russia(and not only),

Yes they have and for a very long time.

> but that's a concern of the equivalent of FBI/NSA/etc, not operators
> public discussion places, unless it really affect operators anyhow.
> Just amazing, how NANOG slipped into pure politics.

The network(s) have been political for a very long time and will only
become more so as time passes.  Remember, the engineers wishing for
the purity of technical discussion are usually the same ones crying
that, "information wants to be free."

Well, no matter.  You want purely technical, okay, let's start with
authorised mail hosts.

You need to add 144.76.183.226/32 to the SPF record for visp.net.lb,
which is currently triggering softfails everywhere.  It might be wise
to explicitly state whether or not it is just 144.76.183.226/32 in the
SPF record for nuclearcat.com given the deny all instruction for that
domain.


Regards,
Ben

-- 
|  GPG Made Easy (GPGME) Python 3 API Maintainer, GNU Privacy Guard |
| GPG key: 0x321E4E2373590E5D  http://www.adversary.org/ben-key.asc |
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| https://www.gnupg.org/  https://securetheinternet.org/|
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Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-02 Thread Denys Fedoryshchenko

On 2017-06-02 05:42, Ben McGinnes wrote:

On Thu, Jun 01, 2017 at 07:15:12PM -0700, Joe Hamelin wrote:


The Seattle Russian Embassy is in the Westin Building just 4 floors
above the fiber meet-me-room and five floors above the NRO tap room.
They use to come ask us (an ISP) for IT help back in '96 when they
would drag an icon too far off the screen in Windows 3.11. We were
on the same floor.


So when Flynn & Friends in the Trump Transition Team were trying to
establish that back channel link to Vladimir Putin they should've just
wandered into the nearest colo facility ... okay, then.  I guess they
did it the other way because they wanted the trench coats.


Regards,
Ben
American diplomats are doing also all sort of nasty stuff in Russia(and 
not only),

but that's a concern of the equivalent of FBI/NSA/etc, not operators
public discussion places, unless it really affect operators anyhow.
Just amazing, how NANOG slipped into pure politics.


Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-01 Thread Christopher Morrow
On Thu, Jun 1, 2017 at 10:15 PM, Joe Hamelin  wrote:

>
> the fiber meet-me-room and five floors above the NRO tap room.  They use to
>

'nro tap room' ... what's the expansion of NRO here?


Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-01 Thread Sean Donelan

On Fri, 2 Jun 2017, Scott Christopher wrote:

But, its odd to send diplomats to remote areas of the country, if you are
not trying to survey geographic infrastructure in the middle of the
country.


It's just "for show."

If they really wanted to be invisible, they could do so without using
diplomats - a group that is always assumed to be under location
surveillance.


Yep, which is why its odd.  It would be much easier to hire one of the 
construction companies which lay fiber routes to prepare a nation-wide 
survey for them.  Or hack their computer servers containing GIS maps.


Maybe diplomats get bored, and like yanking the FBI's chain for sport. 
They have diplomatic immunity, so the risk is very low.


I'll admit, I did visit the Geographic Center of the U.S. (lower 
48-states) in Lebanon, Kansas.  It was very nerdy, but something to check 
off the list.  I only have 6 U.S. states left to visit for another item

to check off the list.  Maybe Russian diplomats have a bucket list too?


Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-01 Thread Ben McGinnes
On Thu, Jun 01, 2017 at 07:15:12PM -0700, Joe Hamelin wrote:
>
> The Seattle Russian Embassy is in the Westin Building just 4 floors
> above the fiber meet-me-room and five floors above the NRO tap room.
> They use to come ask us (an ISP) for IT help back in '96 when they
> would drag an icon too far off the screen in Windows 3.11. We were
> on the same floor.

So when Flynn & Friends in the Trump Transition Team were trying to
establish that back channel link to Vladimir Putin they should've just
wandered into the nearest colo facility ... okay, then.  I guess they
did it the other way because they wanted the trench coats.


Regards,
Ben


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Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-01 Thread Joe Hamelin
Sean said: "Unlike cable landing stations and satellite earth stations,
which are documented in public FCC licenses, usually to 6 decimal points of
longitude & latitude; and and included in navigation maps"

Or you just follow the manhole covers that say Global Crossings.

--
Joe Hamelin, W7COM, Tulalip, WA, +1 (360) 474-7474

On Thu, Jun 1, 2017 at 1:57 PM, Sean Donelan  wrote:

> On Thu, 1 Jun 2017, Rod Beck wrote:
>
>> And even in Kansas most fiber optic cables are probably next to roads, gas
>> pipelines, and railways. Pretty easy to find.
>>
>
> Unlike cable landing stations and satellite earth stations, which are
> documented in public FCC licenses, usually to 6 decimal points of longitude
> & latitude; and and included in navigation maps
>
> Finding the exact cable routes in the middle of the country requires on
> the ground surveying and locating cable markers. Piecemeal maps exist at
> the local level, and high-level maps are available from various providers.
> But as anyone familar with cable accidents or network planning knows, those
> marketing maps are aspirational.  I had real estate people try to convince
> me that "fiber was available" at specific sites because there was a
> railroad across the road, and everyone "knew" that fiber was always next to
> railroads.
>
> Yes, its fairly simple to find a cable marker, if you put people (i.e.
> diplomats) on the ground in remote areas across the country.
>
> But, its odd to send diplomats to remote areas of the country, if you are
> not trying to survey geographic infrastructure in the middle of the country.
>


Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-01 Thread Joe Hamelin
The Seattle Russian Embassy is in the Westin Building just 4 floors above
the fiber meet-me-room and five floors above the NRO tap room.  They use to
come ask us (an ISP) for IT help back in '96 when they would drag an icon
too far off the screen in Windows 3.11. We were on the same floor.

--
Joe Hamelin, W7COM, Tulalip, WA, +1 (360) 474-7474

On Thu, Jun 1, 2017 at 6:08 PM, Brandon Vincent 
wrote:

> On Thu, Jun 1, 2017 at 6:07 PM, Matt Palmer  wrote:
> > I think regardless of what you appear to be interested in, hanging
> around a
> > beach with a big DSLR is likely to get you on one list or another.
>
> "Excuse me, sir! Can you direct us to the naval base in Alameda? It's
> where they keep the nuclear wessels."
>


Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-01 Thread Scott Christopher
Sean Donelan wrote: 

> But, its odd to send diplomats to remote areas of the country, if you are 
> not trying to survey geographic infrastructure in the middle of the 
> country.

It's just "for show."

If they really wanted to be invisible, they could do so without using
diplomats - a group that is always assumed to be under location
surveillance. 

-- 
Regards,
  S.C.


Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-01 Thread Brandon Vincent
On Thu, Jun 1, 2017 at 6:07 PM, Matt Palmer  wrote:
> I think regardless of what you appear to be interested in, hanging around a
> beach with a big DSLR is likely to get you on one list or another.

"Excuse me, sir! Can you direct us to the naval base in Alameda? It's
where they keep the nuclear wessels."


Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-01 Thread Matt Palmer
On Thu, Jun 01, 2017 at 02:02:46PM -0400, Sean Donelan wrote:
> There must be a perfectly logical explanation  Yes, people in the
> industry know where the choke points are. But the choke points aren't always
> the most obvious places. Its kinda a weird for diplomats to show up there.

Maybe they're not *actually* Russian diplomats, but instead undercover
backhoes using Russian diplomatic credentials.

- Matt



Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-01 Thread Matt Palmer
On Thu, Jun 01, 2017 at 12:20:54PM -0700, Eric Kuhnke wrote:
> That said, a pretty quick way to get on some homeland security watch lists
> would be to hang around a cable landing station beach location with a big
> DSLR camera, and appear uninterested in the beach...

I think regardless of what you appear to be interested in, hanging around a
beach with a big DSLR is likely to get you on one list or another.

- Matt



Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-01 Thread Sean Donelan

On Thu, 1 Jun 2017, Rod Beck wrote:

And even in Kansas most fiber optic cables are probably next to roads, gas
pipelines, and railways. Pretty easy to find.


Unlike cable landing stations and satellite earth stations, which are 
documented in public FCC licenses, usually to 6 decimal points of 
longitude & latitude; and and included in navigation maps


Finding the exact cable routes in the middle of the country requires 
on the ground surveying and locating cable markers. Piecemeal maps exist at 
the local level, and high-level maps are available from various providers. 
But as anyone familar with cable accidents or network planning knows, 
those marketing maps are aspirational.  I had real estate people try to 
convince me that "fiber was available" at specific sites because there was 
a railroad across the road, and everyone "knew" that fiber was always 
next to railroads.


Yes, its fairly simple to find a cable marker, if you put people (i.e. 
diplomats) on the ground in remote areas across the country.


But, its odd to send diplomats to remote areas of the country, if you are 
not trying to survey geographic infrastructure in the middle of the 
country.


Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-01 Thread Bruce H McIntosh

On 2017-06-01 16:04, Rod Beck wrote:

And even in Kansas most fiber optic cables are probably next to roads, gas 
pipelines, and railways. Pretty easy to find.


Yep, with those orange-and-white plastic pipe markers sticking up that say "CAUTION! 
Buried Fiber Optic Cable!" on 'em.

--
--
Bruce H. McIntosh
Senior Network Engineer
University of Florida IT ICT Networking and Telecommunication Services
b...@ufl.edu
352-273-1066



Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-01 Thread Rod Beck
And even in Kansas most fiber optic cables are probably next to roads, gas 
pipelines, and railways. Pretty easy to find.


From: Sean Donelan 
Sent: Thursday, June 1, 2017 9:54:32 PM
To: Rod Beck
Cc: Eric Kuhnke; nanog@nanog.org list
Subject: Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

On Thu, 1 Jun 2017, Rod Beck wrote:
> As someone who has sold a lot of capacity on Hibernia Atlantic, I must
> concur. There is a website showing where most of the Trans-Atlantic
> cables land on the West Coast of Britain at towns like Bude in Wales.
> Hiding is not an option.

As far as I know, there are no cable landing stations in Kansas.

Has US geography changed recently?




Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-01 Thread clinton mielke
Sea levels rose pretty quickly

On Thu, Jun 1, 2017 at 12:54 PM, Sean Donelan  wrote:

> On Thu, 1 Jun 2017, Rod Beck wrote:
>
>> As someone who has sold a lot of capacity on Hibernia Atlantic, I must
>> concur. There is a website showing where most of the Trans-Atlantic cables
>> land on the West Coast of Britain at towns like Bude in Wales. Hiding is
>> not an option.
>>
>
> As far as I know, there are no cable landing stations in Kansas.
>
> Has US geography changed recently?
>
>
>


Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-01 Thread Rod Beck
Last time I checked satellite imagery, existing fiber maps, as well as signs 
saying "Fiber Optic Cables" lead to the same outcome: Very little can be 
hidden. Nice try, Sean. You can try out next year.



From: Sean Donelan 
Sent: Thursday, June 1, 2017 9:54 PM
To: Rod Beck
Cc: Eric Kuhnke; nanog@nanog.org list
Subject: Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

On Thu, 1 Jun 2017, Rod Beck wrote:
> As someone who has sold a lot of capacity on Hibernia Atlantic, I must
> concur. There is a website showing where most of the Trans-Atlantic
> cables land on the West Coast of Britain at towns like Bude in Wales.
> Hiding is not an option.

As far as I know, there are no cable landing stations in Kansas.

Has US geography changed recently?




Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-01 Thread Sean Donelan

On Thu, 1 Jun 2017, Rod Beck wrote:
As someone who has sold a lot of capacity on Hibernia Atlantic, I must 
concur. There is a website showing where most of the Trans-Atlantic 
cables land on the West Coast of Britain at towns like Bude in Wales. 
Hiding is not an option.


As far as I know, there are no cable landing stations in Kansas.

Has US geography changed recently?




Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-01 Thread Rod Beck
As someone who has sold a lot of capacity on Hibernia Atlantic, I must concur. 
There is a website showing where most of the Trans-Atlantic cables land on the 
West Coast of Britain at towns like Bude in Wales. Hiding is not an option.


http://www.kis-orca.eu/


Regards,


Roderick.




From: NANOG  on behalf of Eric Kuhnke 

Sent: Thursday, June 1, 2017 9:20 PM
To: nanog@nanog.org list
Subject: Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

It's not like the locations of any of the transatlantic or transpacific
cable landing stations are a big secret. They're published in the FCC's
digest reports for international authorization and whenever ownership of a
cable changes hands or is restructured.

Additionally it is pretty hard to hide from modern imagery intelligence
analysis any sort of building that has 1+1 or N+1 200kW diesel generators
and the cooling required for a medium sized telecom facility.

Locations of cables are published specifically for the purpose of helping
trawlers and ships avoid damaging them, for example:
http://bandoncable.org/cables.asp
[http://bandoncable.org/images/cable01.jpg]<http://bandoncable.org/cables.asp>

Bandon Submarine Cable Council - Cable 
Locations<http://bandoncable.org/cables.asp>
bandoncable.org
Be advised of the location if two submarine cables in the North Pacific located 
off the coast of Bandon, Oregon. The TPC-5 cable system consists of ...



That said, a pretty quick way to get on some homeland security watch lists
would be to hang around a cable landing station beach location with a big
DSLR camera, and appear uninterested in the beach...




On Thu, Jun 1, 2017 at 11:02 AM, Sean Donelan  wrote:

>
> There must be a perfectly logical explanation  Yes, people in the
> industry know where the choke points are. But the choke points aren't
> always the most obvious places. Its kinda a weird for diplomats to show up
> there.
>
> On the other hand, I've been a fiber optic tourist.  I've visited many
> critical choke points in the USA and other countries, and even took selfies
> :-)
>
>
> http://www.politico.com/story/2017/06/01/russia-spies-espion
> age-trump-239003
>
> In the throes of the 2016 campaign, the FBI found itself with an
> escalating problem: Russian diplomats, whose travel was supposed to be
> tracked by the State Department, were going missing.
>
> The diplomats, widely assumed to be intelligence operatives, would
> eventually turn up in odd places, often in middle-of-nowhere USA. One was
> found on a beach, nowhere near where he was supposed to be. In one
> particularly bizarre case, relayed by a U.S. intelligence official, another
> turned up wandering around in the middle of the desert. Interestingly, both
> seemed to be lingering where underground fiber-optic cables tend to run.
>
> According to another U.S. intelligence official, “They find these guys
> driving around in circles in Kansas. It’s a pretty aggressive effort.”
>
> It’s a trend that has led intelligence officials to conclude that the
> Kremlin is waging a quiet effort to map the United States’
> telecommunications infrastructure, perhaps preparing for an opportunity to
> disrupt it.
>


Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-01 Thread Eric Kuhnke
It's not like the locations of any of the transatlantic or transpacific
cable landing stations are a big secret. They're published in the FCC's
digest reports for international authorization and whenever ownership of a
cable changes hands or is restructured.

Additionally it is pretty hard to hide from modern imagery intelligence
analysis any sort of building that has 1+1 or N+1 200kW diesel generators
and the cooling required for a medium sized telecom facility.

Locations of cables are published specifically for the purpose of helping
trawlers and ships avoid damaging them, for example:
http://bandoncable.org/cables.asp

That said, a pretty quick way to get on some homeland security watch lists
would be to hang around a cable landing station beach location with a big
DSLR camera, and appear uninterested in the beach...




On Thu, Jun 1, 2017 at 11:02 AM, Sean Donelan  wrote:

>
> There must be a perfectly logical explanation  Yes, people in the
> industry know where the choke points are. But the choke points aren't
> always the most obvious places. Its kinda a weird for diplomats to show up
> there.
>
> On the other hand, I've been a fiber optic tourist.  I've visited many
> critical choke points in the USA and other countries, and even took selfies
> :-)
>
>
> http://www.politico.com/story/2017/06/01/russia-spies-espion
> age-trump-239003
>
> In the throes of the 2016 campaign, the FBI found itself with an
> escalating problem: Russian diplomats, whose travel was supposed to be
> tracked by the State Department, were going missing.
>
> The diplomats, widely assumed to be intelligence operatives, would
> eventually turn up in odd places, often in middle-of-nowhere USA. One was
> found on a beach, nowhere near where he was supposed to be. In one
> particularly bizarre case, relayed by a U.S. intelligence official, another
> turned up wandering around in the middle of the desert. Interestingly, both
> seemed to be lingering where underground fiber-optic cables tend to run.
>
> According to another U.S. intelligence official, “They find these guys
> driving around in circles in Kansas. It’s a pretty aggressive effort.”
>
> It’s a trend that has led intelligence officials to conclude that the
> Kremlin is waging a quiet effort to map the United States’
> telecommunications infrastructure, perhaps preparing for an opportunity to
> disrupt it.
>


Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-01 Thread Mel Beckman
That's how we found the Russian's fiber cables:

"According to “Blind Man’s Bluff,” Bradley, in his predawn stupor, recalled 
from his youth written signs that had been posted along the Mississippi River 
to mark undersea cables. The signs, posted along the shore, were meant to 
prevent passing from hooking the cables with their anchors. With this in mind, 
Bradley reasoned that there had to be similar signs near the shallower points 
on the Sea of Okhotsk."

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/checkpoint/wp/2015/10/26/as-russia-scopes-undersea-cables-a-shadow-of-the-united-states-cold-war-past/?utm_term=.48dbf7c289af

 -mel beckman

> On Jun 1, 2017, at 11:33 AM, Brandon Vincent  wrote:
> 
> DO NOT ANCHOR OR DREDGE is a pretty good indicator.
> 
>> On Thu, Jun 1, 2017 at 11:05 AM, Jared Mauch  wrote:
>> 
>>> On Jun 1, 2017, at 2:02 PM, Sean Donelan  wrote:
>>> 
>>> 
>>> There must be a perfectly logical explanation  Yes, people in the 
>>> industry know where the choke points are. But the choke points aren't 
>>> always the most obvious places. Its kinda a weird for diplomats to show up 
>>> there.
>>> 
>>> On the other hand, I've been a fiber optic tourist.  I've visited many 
>>> critical choke points in the USA and other countries, and even took selfies 
>>> :-)
>>> 
>>> 
>>> http://www.politico.com/story/2017/06/01/russia-spies-espionage-trump-239003
>>> 
>>> In the throes of the 2016 campaign, the FBI found itself with an escalating 
>>> problem: Russian diplomats, whose travel was supposed to be tracked by the 
>>> State Department, were going missing.
>>> 
>>> The diplomats, widely assumed to be intelligence operatives, would 
>>> eventually turn up in odd places, often in middle-of-nowhere USA. One was 
>>> found on a beach, nowhere near where he was supposed to be. In one 
>>> particularly bizarre case, relayed by a U.S. intelligence official, another 
>>> turned up wandering around in the middle of the desert. Interestingly, both 
>>> seemed to be lingering where underground fiber-optic cables tend to run.
>>> 
>>> According to another U.S. intelligence official, “They find these guys 
>>> driving around in circles in Kansas. It’s a pretty aggressive effort.”
>>> 
>>> It’s a trend that has led intelligence officials to conclude that the 
>>> Kremlin is waging a quiet effort to map the United States’ 
>>> telecommunications infrastructure, perhaps preparing for an opportunity to 
>>> disrupt it.
>> 
>> Seems it would be easier to just pay for a subscription to a service like 
>> FiberLocator or similar.
>> 
>> They could just dial 811 as well and request the locates happen.
>> 
>> - Jared


Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-01 Thread valdis . kletnieks
On Thu, 01 Jun 2017 11:32:28 -0700, Brandon Vincent said:
> DO NOT ANCHOR OR DREDGE is a pretty good indicator.

In Kansas? :)


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Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-01 Thread Brandon Vincent
DO NOT ANCHOR OR DREDGE is a pretty good indicator.

On Thu, Jun 1, 2017 at 11:05 AM, Jared Mauch  wrote:
>
>> On Jun 1, 2017, at 2:02 PM, Sean Donelan  wrote:
>>
>>
>> There must be a perfectly logical explanation  Yes, people in the 
>> industry know where the choke points are. But the choke points aren't always 
>> the most obvious places. Its kinda a weird for diplomats to show up there.
>>
>> On the other hand, I've been a fiber optic tourist.  I've visited many 
>> critical choke points in the USA and other countries, and even took selfies 
>> :-)
>>
>>
>> http://www.politico.com/story/2017/06/01/russia-spies-espionage-trump-239003
>>
>> In the throes of the 2016 campaign, the FBI found itself with an escalating 
>> problem: Russian diplomats, whose travel was supposed to be tracked by the 
>> State Department, were going missing.
>>
>> The diplomats, widely assumed to be intelligence operatives, would 
>> eventually turn up in odd places, often in middle-of-nowhere USA. One was 
>> found on a beach, nowhere near where he was supposed to be. In one 
>> particularly bizarre case, relayed by a U.S. intelligence official, another 
>> turned up wandering around in the middle of the desert. Interestingly, both 
>> seemed to be lingering where underground fiber-optic cables tend to run.
>>
>> According to another U.S. intelligence official, “They find these guys 
>> driving around in circles in Kansas. It’s a pretty aggressive effort.”
>>
>> It’s a trend that has led intelligence officials to conclude that the 
>> Kremlin is waging a quiet effort to map the United States’ 
>> telecommunications infrastructure, perhaps preparing for an opportunity to 
>> disrupt it.
>
> Seems it would be easier to just pay for a subscription to a service like 
> FiberLocator or similar.
>
> They could just dial 811 as well and request the locates happen.
>
> - Jared


Re: Russian diplomats lingering near fiber optic cables

2017-06-01 Thread Jared Mauch

> On Jun 1, 2017, at 2:02 PM, Sean Donelan  wrote:
> 
> 
> There must be a perfectly logical explanation  Yes, people in the 
> industry know where the choke points are. But the choke points aren't always 
> the most obvious places. Its kinda a weird for diplomats to show up there.
> 
> On the other hand, I've been a fiber optic tourist.  I've visited many 
> critical choke points in the USA and other countries, and even took selfies 
> :-)
> 
> 
> http://www.politico.com/story/2017/06/01/russia-spies-espionage-trump-239003
> 
> In the throes of the 2016 campaign, the FBI found itself with an escalating 
> problem: Russian diplomats, whose travel was supposed to be tracked by the 
> State Department, were going missing.
> 
> The diplomats, widely assumed to be intelligence operatives, would eventually 
> turn up in odd places, often in middle-of-nowhere USA. One was found on a 
> beach, nowhere near where he was supposed to be. In one particularly bizarre 
> case, relayed by a U.S. intelligence official, another turned up wandering 
> around in the middle of the desert. Interestingly, both seemed to be 
> lingering where underground fiber-optic cables tend to run.
> 
> According to another U.S. intelligence official, “They find these guys 
> driving around in circles in Kansas. It’s a pretty aggressive effort.”
> 
> It’s a trend that has led intelligence officials to conclude that the Kremlin 
> is waging a quiet effort to map the United States’ telecommunications 
> infrastructure, perhaps preparing for an opportunity to disrupt it.

Seems it would be easier to just pay for a subscription to a service like 
FiberLocator or similar.

They could just dial 811 as well and request the locates happen.

- Jared