25,000 Texans lose internet after stray bullet hits Spectrum fiber line

midian182

Posts: 11,726   +177
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WTF?! Losing your internet connection is especially annoying in today's connected world. What's even more irritating is when an outage is the result of someone accidentally shooting a cable. This was the situation that around 25,000 Spectrum customers in Texas had to deal with last week, marking the third Spectrum outage caused by weapons fire in the last 12 months.

The interruption to ISP Spectrum's service affected around 25,000 people in cities across Texas, including Dallas, Irving, Plano, Arlington, Austin, and San Antonio, according to the Dallas Morning News.

Spectrum owner Charter later confirmed that the outage was the result of a stray bullet that hit a fiber optic data cable that serviced the area.

While fiber optic cables tend to be buried underground, this one was presumably attached to a utility pole. Aerial fiber deployment is common in suburban and rural areas due to cost efficiency and faster deployment, but it does leave the cables exposed to potential damage from external elements.

No other details about the incident were given. Charter did say it was a "stray" bullet rather than an intentional act of vandalism, but there's no information on whether the person who did it came forward or was found, how the ISP knew about it, and if the police were involved. Estimates say there are between 5 million and 25 million firearms in Texas, which is a lot of potential stray bullets.

As noted by The Reg, this is the third time in 12 months that Spectrum's service has been affected by a firearm-related incident. In June, a customer in Ohio was left without service after a shotgun blast damaged a line – no police were involved – and Columbus revellers firing into the air to celebrate the arrival of the 2025 New Year hit Spectrum fiber, leaving customers in one of the capital city's largest neighbourhoods without internet for 43 hours. The gunfire also affected a circuit feeding traffic cameras, disconnecting them for over a day.

It's not a problem limited to Spectrum, either. In 2022, Comcast Xfinity fiber lines in Oakland, California, were peppered with 17 rounds. The resulting outage left 30,000 people offline just before the start of an NFL game between the Los Angeles Rams and the San Francisco 49ers.

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First Amendment loses to Second Amendment... again!
I'm sure some will spin this as Second Amendment expression is a First Amendment expression. And that Second Amendment Expression was in response to Spectrum's service.
 
It's just kiddie type irresponsible idleness in adulthood. Lets see how many stones it takes to break a power-pole insulator ...
 
Texas...

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I've worked in telecoms doing IT for while and I've delt with all kinds of outages and their causes but this is a new one for me. One of my personal strangest was the two bull moose that got into a brawl and completely trashed a fiber interconnect. :p
 
I've worked in telecoms doing IT for while and I've delt with all kinds of outages and their causes but this is a new one for me. One of my personal strangest was the two bull moose that got into a brawl and completely trashed a fiber interconnect. :p
We dealt a lot with carriers wanting resiliency in the network for when a JCB accidentally takes out a cable - I guess that's a thing of the past.
 
Well, the answer OF COURSE is to ban guns isn't it? LOL
I don't know how, but somehow, I can't imagine that a fiber transmission line looks like food waiting to be shot - assuming that Spectrum reported the actual cause of the downed line.
 
I don't know how, but somehow, I can't imagine that a fiber transmission line looks like food waiting to be shot - assuming that Spectrum reported the actual cause of the downed line.
Have you ever tasted a fiber transmission line? Scrumptious. Once you go fiber, you cant go back!
 
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