
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


A Chinese-owned cargo ship called the Yi Peng 3 is sitting idle in Danish waters, after undersea internet cables were cut in the Baltic Sea. European officials have cried sabotage.
It’s not the first time something like this has happened; similar events have seen cables cut in other parts of the ocean. There’s serious concern that China and Russia are planning more of these attacks, and the way the internet is set up, it wouldn’t take many of them to cause serious problems.
So how vulnerable is the internet to undersea sabotage? And if a big global conflict were to break out, would the cables be the first casualty?
Follow If You're Listening on the ABC Listen app.
Check out our series on YouTube: https://youtu.be/GOA7NxYvYKg?si=QgMQOudReqZkahlU
By ABC4.6
186186 ratings
A Chinese-owned cargo ship called the Yi Peng 3 is sitting idle in Danish waters, after undersea internet cables were cut in the Baltic Sea. European officials have cried sabotage.
It’s not the first time something like this has happened; similar events have seen cables cut in other parts of the ocean. There’s serious concern that China and Russia are planning more of these attacks, and the way the internet is set up, it wouldn’t take many of them to cause serious problems.
So how vulnerable is the internet to undersea sabotage? And if a big global conflict were to break out, would the cables be the first casualty?
Follow If You're Listening on the ABC Listen app.
Check out our series on YouTube: https://youtu.be/GOA7NxYvYKg?si=QgMQOudReqZkahlU

106 Listeners

74 Listeners

96 Listeners

55 Listeners

15 Listeners

15 Listeners

9 Listeners

4 Listeners

15 Listeners

27 Listeners

88 Listeners

66 Listeners

8 Listeners

7 Listeners

11 Listeners

8 Listeners

43 Listeners

125 Listeners

12 Listeners

117 Listeners

154 Listeners

248 Listeners

5 Listeners

62 Listeners

2 Listeners

43 Listeners

1 Listeners

109 Listeners