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How China swallowed 15% of 'Net traffic for 18 minutes | Ars Technica
https://arstechnica.com/.../how-china-swallowed-15-of-net-traffic-for-18-minutes.ars
Nov 17, 2010 - Other servers around the world quickly adopted these paths, routing all traffic to about 15 percent of the Internet's destinations through servers located in China. This incident affected traffic to and from US government (''.gov'') and military (''.mil'Internet traffic was routed via Chinese servers - Washington Times
https://www.washingtontimes.com/.../15/internet-traffic-was-routed-via-chinese-server...
Nov 15, 2010 - Nearly 15 percent of the world's Internet traffic, including that of many U.S. government and military sites, was briefly redirected through computer servers in China in April, according to a congressional commission report due out this weekChina Hijacks 15% of Internet Traffic? - Arbor Networks
https://www.arbornetworks.com/blog/asert/china-hijacks-15-of-internet-traffic/
Nov 19, 2010 - During a subsequent roughly 15 minute window, a small percentage of Internet providers around the world redirected traffic for a small percentage of these routes to Chinese address space. RIPE provides a link to a list of some of these prefixes (as well as indicating the impact on European carriers was ...China 'hijacks' 15 per cent of world's internet traffic - Telegraph
www.telegraph.co.uk › News › World News › Asia › China
Nov 18, 2010 - A state-owned Chinese telecommunications firm re-routed around 15 per cent of all web traffic through its own servers during a brief period on April 8, the report said. The incident has raised fears that China may have harvested highly-Q+A: What happens when Web traffic goes through China? - Reuters
www.reuters.com/...china.../qa-what-happens-when-web-traffic-goes-through-china-i...
Nov 19, 2010 - On April 8, China Telecom sent out an incorrect routing signal that advertised routing through China as the most efficient route. This caused web traffic to 15 percent of the world's Internet sites to pass through Chinese servers for 18 minutes. This means data traveling to sites owned by the U.S. Senate, ...Elementary Information Security - Page 490 - Google Books Result
https://books.google.fr/books?isbn=1284055930
Richard E. Smith - 2015 - ‎Computers
In April of 2010, China Telecom's border routers briefly distributed routes that redirected 15 percent of the world's Internet destinations through China's routers. Like the Florida incident, the rerouting occurred when the AS published routing information it received from an internal network. China Telecom and the ChineseQ+A: What happens when Web traffic goes through China? | Reuters
www.reuters.com/article/us-china-internet-idUSTRE6AI1DK20101119
Nov 19, 2010 - On April 8, China Telecom sent out an incorrect routing signal that advertised routing through China as the most efficient route. This caused web traffic to 15 percent of the world's Internet sites to pass through Chinese servers for 18 minutes. This means data traveling to sites owned by the U.S. Senate, ...Chinese ISP hijacks the Internet | BGPmon
https://bgpmon.net/chinese-isp-hijacked-10-of-the-internet/
Apr 8, 2010 - AS23724 is one of the Data Centers operated by China Telecom, China's largest ISP. Normally AS23724 CHINANET-IDC-BJ-AP IDC, China Telecommunications Corporation only originates about 40 prefixes, however today for about 15 minutes they originated about ~37,000 unique prefixes that are not ...China hijacking hacking "hit 15% of net" says U.S. | Computerworld
https://www.computerworld.com/.../china-hijacking-hacking--hit-15--of-net--says-u-s...
Nov 18, 2010 - China Telecom denies BGP-trombone hijacking allegations by U.S. review commission. By Richi Jennings. November 18, 2010. Chinese flag (VectorVault) Traffic to 15 percent of internet destinations was rerouted via China in a route hijacking incident, earlier this year. The traffic included government and ...Internet in China - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_in_China
China has been on the Internet intermittently since May 1989 and on a permanent basis since 20 April 1994. In 2008 China became the largest population on the Internet. As of July 2016, 730,723,960 people were Internet users. China's first foray into global cyberspace was an email (not TCP/IP based and thus technically ...