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Web Sites Face Danger As SWINE-FLU PHOBES Telecommute In Greater Numbers!

Von: James Fenimore (slipuvalad@yahoo.com) [Profil]
Datum: 28.10.2009 20:42
Message-ID: <fbc671e3-53b8-44e3-b042-0f2345bbf416@y28g2000prd.googlegroups.com>
Newsgroup: alt.politics.republicans alt.politics.economicsmisc.consumers alt.healthmisc.health.alternative
"Flu-wary telecommuters may clog Web networks, GAO says"

By Cecilia Kang
Wednesday, October 28, 2009


AS THE SPREAD OF THE H1N1 FLU keeps more Americans away from work and
school, a federal report warns that all those people logging on to the
Web from home could overwhelm Internet networks.

The Government Accountability Office reported earlier this week that
if the flu reaches a pandemic, a surge in telecommuting and children
accessing video files and games at home could bog down local networks.

And if that were to happen, it is not clear whether the federal
government is prepared to deal with the problem, the GAO said.

The Department of Homeland Security is in charge of communications
networks during times of national emergency. But it doesn't have a
strategy to deal with overloaded Internet networks -- an essential
resource to keep the economy humming, and residents informed and
connected during a pandemic, the GAO said. Furthermore, the DHS hasn't
coordinated with agencies such as the Federal Communications
Commission to create guidelines for how telecom, cable and satellite
providers can minimize congestion.

Such confusion "would increase the risk that the federal government
will not be able to respond rapidly or effectively if a pandemic
quickly emerges," the GAO reported.

Network operators such as Comcast, AT&T, Cox and Verizon are limited
in their options. They could add bandwidth capacity and lay down
private lines for essential workers, but that is expensive and would
take too long. Shutting down certain Web sites or prioritizing traffic
could run into technical and regulatory hurdles, the report said.

An Internet service provider could decide to slow all connections in a
certain neighborhood, but then that network operator would be
violating contracts with customers, according to the report.

"Private Internet providers have limited ability to prioritize traffic
or take other actions that could assist critical tele-workers. Some
actions, such as reducing customers' transmission speeds or blocking
popular Web sites, could negatively impact e-commerce and require
government authorization," the GAO report said.

House Energy and Commerce Committee members commissioned the report,
asking the GAO to specifically look at how financial markets would
deal with such a scenario.

In its response to the GAO, the DHS said it didn't know which agency
had clear or specific authority to allow telecom, cable and satellite
companies to block or slow traffic to cope with congestion. The FCC
can grant exceptions to its Internet access rules that would allow
prioritization of certain traffic in instances where public safety is
in jeopardy.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/10/27/AR2009102703743.html

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