Pinu7 said:
If the users payed for it, the government is out of line for taking it away.
In many countries the Government owns the telephone company which is also the internet provider. The government pays for it, the subscribers are...just subscribers. They have no say over if the service stays up.
Even if it is a private company, they provide service according to what the government allows.
When you have a country like Egypt with 4 internet/cell phone operators, it is very easy to shut off service, of course they can be cut. The fact that people have become addicted to them, does not make them a right.
MPLS can be dynamically re-routed around a cut, but the entire network can be compromised quickly.
Intranets can connect to extranets and form an internet link open to outside users. Basically, the more competition, the harder it is to shut down.
Phones, cell phones, internet, mail service, package delivery, radio, tv, etc..., these are services and conveniences.
Trying to shut down internet access would be much more difficult in the US. Thousands of companies own international private lines, which are almost impossible to shut down, that is where the strength lies, although they are being replaced by cheaper MPLS, . Internet carried via frame relay and MPLS can be shut off with a computer command. So can the internet that is not private line based. Satellites can be interfered with.
I'd say land lines are pretty secure. That is how some info out of Egypt was getting out at first.