Our entire digital world runs on something most people never think about—a network of cables buried deep under the ocean. The internet has become so woven into daily life that we take it for granted. But the moment connectivity drops, reality hits hard: we're dependent on an incredibly fragile system.



These subsea cables carry nearly all international data traffic. When they fail—whether from ship anchors, sharks, or earthquakes—entire regions go dark. The fragility is real, and it's a reminder of why decentralized infrastructure keeps gaining momentum. A system that can collapse when a single point fails isn't future-proof.

This infrastructure crisis isn't just a technical problem. It's a wake-up call about what happens when we concentrate critical systems in too few hands. That's exactly the kind of thinking pushing Web3 forward—building networks that don't depend on centralized chokepoints.
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MoonlightGamervip
· 01-07 20:40
When the submarine cable is cut, the entire region has no internet. Isn't this the fate of centralization?
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RuntimeErrorvip
· 01-07 20:37
Does a shark really bite underwater cables... But on the other hand, centralized infrastructure is just a ticking time bomb --- So all our data relies on just a few underwater cables, how fragile is that --- This is the real reason Web3 exists, no one wants to be hostage to a single cable --- Ship anchors, sharks, earthquakes... just thinking about it gives me a headache. It’s about time to decentralize --- The internet is indeed too dependent on this centralized system, trouble is bound to happen sooner or later --- Decentralized infrastructure is not hype; it’s a real demand --- Wait, do sharks really bite cables? Or is it just a joke
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GasFeeCriervip
· 01-07 20:23
When the submarine cable is cut, the entire area has no internet. This damn thing is truly a single point of failure.
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FlashLoanPhantomvip
· 01-07 20:21
A submarine cable was cut, leaving half of Asia without internet. Only then did I realize how fragile we are. It's truly outrageous that a shark biting a cable happened. It might be better to switch directly to decentralized solutions. That's right, a single point of failure can cause the entire system to collapse. We should have embraced Web3 long ago. This is why I am all in on on-chain infrastructure. Centralized systems are doomed to fail eventually. Laying submarine cables is not as good as deploying blockchain networks; at least they’re not afraid of sharks.
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BearMarketGardenervip
· 01-07 20:19
Haha, I really didn't expect the underwater cable to be bitten by sharks. The internet can be so fragile. Waiting for the day when a ship's anchor causes trouble, and the entire area goes offline... decentralized systems should have been adopted long ago. That's why we need to bet on Web3. Single points of failure just don't work.
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