THE RETAIL BULLETIN - The home of retail news
Click here
Home Page
News Categories
Commentary
CX
Department Stores
Desert Island Stores
Electricals and Tech
Entertainment
Fashion
Food and Drink
General Merchandise
Grocery
Health and Beauty
Home and DIY
Interviews
People Matter
Retail Business Strategy
Property
Retail Solutions
Electricals & Technology
Sports and Leisure
TRB conference review
Christmas Ads
Shopping Centres, High Streets & Retail Parks
Uncategorized
Retail Events
People in Retail Awards 2024
Retail Ecom North
Retail HR North 2025
Retail Omnichannel Futures 2025
Retail HR Central 2025
The Future of The High Street 2025
Retail Ecom Central
Upcoming Retail Events
Past Retail Events
Retail Insights
Retail Solutions
Advertise
About
Contact
Subscribe for free
Terms and Policies
Privacy Policy
US worries over Internet `kill switch’ highlights need for contingency planning

As US IT security experts and liberty organisations discuss the ramifications of the recent effective shutdown of the Internet in Egypt – and whether President Obama… View Article

RETAIL SOLUTIONS UK NEWS

US worries over Internet `kill switch’ highlights need for contingency planning

As US IT security experts and liberty organisations discuss the ramifications of the recent effective shutdown of the Internet in Egypt – and whether President Obama should have access to an Internet `kill switch’ – the organisers of Infosecurity Europe show are saying that the saga highlights the need for IT contingency planning.

According to Claire Sellick, Event Director for Infosecurity Europe, the lessons coming out of the Egypt net shutdown – and the fact that the US government is now talking about having access to a similar `shutdown button’ for the US side of the Internet – should act as a red flag to IT managers in organisations of all sizes. 

“What we are seeing here is a rising awareness of the Internet’s reliance on key physical elements such as main server centres and major routing stations, and how closing down these elements can effectively paralyse a nation’s access to the Internet,” she said.

“The headache that this causes on the security front is, what effect would a shutdown on, for example, of one or more of the US Internet main switches, or the Amsterdam Internet Exchange (AMS-IX), have on your organisation, and the answer is that the effects could be very severe,” she added.

Sellick went on to say that a number of UK ISPs rely on peering links with US and European exchanges for a lot of their Internet traffic, so if a foreign exchange shutdown were to occur, it could have severe repercussions for some UK hosted Web sites and company intranet/Internet traffic.

The key word here, she explained, is `some’ as not all Internet hosting and service providers in the UK are equal in terms of their reliance on foreign exchange resources.

For example, she says, whilst most of the UK’s Internet traffic is routed via the London Telehouse switches, a growing minority is also being routed via Manchester’s MANAP switch, meaning that a serious issue with one switch would mean users of the other switch could continue business as usual.

“And the effects of this could range from catastrophic to a minor inconvenience, depending on which hosting or internet service provider your UK organisation uses, and whether you have IP route diversity systems in place”.

Subscribe For Retail News