Countries along global optical cable routes
Fibre-optic Link Around the Globe (FLAG) is a 28,000-kilometre-long (17,398 ; 15,119 ) mostly- that connects the,,, and many places in between. Consider the biggest corridors: the transatlantic links between the US and Europe; the transpacific routes between the US and East Asia; the high-capacity ring between Japan, Korea, Hong Kong, and Singapore; the Europe-Asia systems via the Indian Ocean; and the Africa-Europe. The Submarine Cable Map is a free and regularly updated resource from TeleGeography. Physical glass cables on the ocean floor carry the bulk of intercontinental traffic—which is why chokepoints and cable cuts can slow (or sometimes partially disrupt) entire regions. This page is designed to answer a simple question: what does the world internet cable map actually look like, and how. Explore the physical backbone of the internet with our interactive map of undersea fiber optic cables, peering exchange points, and more.
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