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How the Internet Crosses Oceans Without You Noticing

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The ocean floor is home to some of the strangest creatures on Earth. But it's also where your strangest TikToks go to reach Alaska, Hawaii or the other side of the planet. Most of the world's international online traffic travels through cables lying at the bottom of the ocean.

Earlier this year, TAT-8 (Trans-Atlantic Telephone 8), the very first transatlantic fiber-optic cable, was pulled up after 38 years. It had been sitting, unused, at the bottom of the Atlantic for nearly a quarter of a century. It might be mind-boggling to think about how long these sit in the depths of our oceans, transmitting our emails, video calls and memes across the globe. Let's make sense of how these cables work and why pulling the TAT-8 up was worthwhile.

About 99 percent of international internet traffic uses these undersea cables. There are over 500 of them in service worldwide. Laid end to end, they would stretch for over a million miles, wrapping around the Earth multiple times.

Each cable is roughly as thick as a garden hose. Inside are strands of glass fiber no thicker than a human hair. Lasers send coded pulses of light through these fibers billions of times per second. (Meanwhile, signal boosters along the cable amplify the lasers as they travel.) Dozens of different laser colors can travel through the same fiber at once, each carrying its own stream of data. One might include an email traveling from Boston to Melbourne, while another could transmit a video call from New York to Tokyo. Each cable can move hundreds of terabits of data per second.