The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Mr Putin, want to trace UK’s transatlan­tic web cable? Watch this video!

Google f ilm is branded ‘national security risk’

- By Natasha Livingston­e and Mark Hookham

GOOGLE has been accused of risking national security by posting a video online that discloses the exact location of a new transatlan­tic internet cable.

The promotiona­l video, which has been viewed more than 4,600 times, shows the precise position on a beach in Cornwall where the tech giant’s 3,000-mile-long ‘Grace Hopper’ cable comes ashore and begins its route inland.

Remarkably, it can be accessed from an unprotecte­d manhole under a beach car park, making it an easy target for terrorists or spies.

The disclosure comes amid mounting concern over the vulnerabil­ity of the fibre-optic undersea lines between the US and Europe that carry up to 99 per cent of Britain’s internet and phone traffic. Earlier this month, Admiral Sir Tony Radakin, head of the UK’s armed forces, warned of the threat of Russian submarines severing the crucial cables.

The Grace Hopper cable linking New York and Cornwall, named after a US computer science pioneer, will dramatical­ly boost Britain’s internet capacity, allowing 17.5 million people to view ultra-high-definition videos simultaneo­usly. Customers will include the UK Government and Lloyds Bank.

The cable will become operationa­l later this year, but a YouTube video uploaded by the company in November includes drone footage that clearly identifies the route of the cable beneath a popular beach.

In the video, workmen are seen digging a trench in the sand that takes the cable around a row of brightly coloured beach huts and towards a nearby car park.

A Mail on Sunday reporter used the video to locate the cable and discovered that a manhole cover – clearly marked as housing a ‘cable’ – provides access to the Grace Hopper in the beach car park, which has no barrier and 24-hour access.

The manhole cover did not appear to have been fitted with anti-tamper seals, but Google last night said it used locked covers.

Sam Armstrong, director for communicat­ions at the Henry Jackson Society, a think-tank specialisi­ng in extremism, said: ‘These cables will carry everything from stock market trades to Government data. Their sensitivit­y as a target to our adversarie­s should have been obvious.

‘For Google to have disclosed the location of unguarded cables wasn’t just corporatel­y irresponsi­ble, it is a potential national security risk.’

A Google spokesman said sharing the landing location of subsea cables is ‘standard practice in the industry’, adding: ‘Grace Hopper is not yet in service, therefore what might have been observed during installati­on may not yet reflect the high level of security in place during live operations.’

 ?? ?? ON THE BEACH: A screenshot of the cable in Cornwall
ON THE BEACH: A screenshot of the cable in Cornwall

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