Google 'marine' white shark sharks

A white shark caught using a jaw of a Google fiber optic cable. It is unclear why the shark acted like that.

A white shark caught using a jaw of a Google fiber optic cable. It is unclear why the shark acted like that.

A video recorded by professional divers shows the white shark taking sharp teeth slowly chewing on the cable.

Picture 1 of Google 'marine' white shark sharks

Picture 2 of Google 'marine' white shark sharks

The shark hovered above, then plunged down to chew the cable.Photo: Youtube

After watching the video, Google Corporation had to send professional divers to the seabed, using Kevlar - the material used in bulletproof jackets - to wrap up more than 160,000 km of fiber optic cables to avoid the arrival of sharks. after attack.

The cable that Google uses is made of fiberglass, transmitting data across the ocean through a laser beam. Google's product manager said the material offers 100 times faster connection speeds than copper.

If the above fiber optic segments are broken, the Internet in many countries may be slowed down, more seriously than disconnected.

One cannot find the reason why sharks act like that. In 1985, a shark's tooth was discovered deep inside a test fiber optic cable off the coast of the Canary Islands.

Then, in 1987, the fiber-optic cable connecting the US, Europe and Japan was also bitten by sharks but left no serious consequences.

At that time, some people wanted to find out why sharks like 'preening' a cable, by inserting a piece of cable into a shark's throat, see how it reacts but the animal does not show interest. interesting.

Update 25 May 2019
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