Welcome Guest. | Log In| Register | Membership Benefits
  • Email this page E-mail this page
  • |  Print Print this page
  • |   Bookmark and Share
  • icon

Attacks Lead To Internet Slowdowns


The terrorist attacks on the United States have made Internet access slow and unreliable, but most of Internet infrastructure is still working.



Internet users are finding that their access is slow and unreliable after destruction caused by terrorist attacks on Washington and New York paralyzed networks on Tuesday and continued to cause problems Wednesday.

Internet traffic surged in the moments after the first building collapse at the World Trade Center, as users flocked to news Web sites and sent frantic messages to loved ones. Internet performance monitoring firm Matrix.Net saw a spike in IP traffic shortly after the attacks, with the average "reachability" of Web sites dropping 8%, from 96% to 88%, beginning around 10 a.m. EDT.


More Software Insights

White Papers

Webcasts

Reports

Videos


Roger Smith spoke with the CEO of Engine Yard, Lance Walley, about their Ruby and Rails deployment platform. Jeff Hartley, VP of Products at Terracotta explains how his company is helping keep the database out of the bottleneck for its customer's Java applications. Replay Software Offers a Unique Quality Assurance Solution: Record The Software Execution and Replay The Results
Roger Smith spoke with the CEO of Engine Yard, Lance Walley, about their Ruby and Rails deployment platform.
News sites were particularly hard hit. According to a spokeswoman for New York Times Digital, NYTimes.com received an estimated 11.5 million page views Tuesday, exceeding their previous record of 9.6 million, set last year on the day after the presidential election.

With all that extra traffic, many users couldn't get to the news. To combat the problem, system administrators simplified site design to speed load times.

"Within the first hour, we removed most of the graphics, including the ads, from the entire site," the Times spokeswoman says. "We also removed the registration requirements, and that is still down."

Administrators at Times Digital were also able to reconfigure ad servers to help handle the extra traffic. "We have had heavy news days like this before," says the spokeswoman. "We just know to experiment."

At MSNBC.com, system administrators saw similarly high demand. "During the breaking news cycle, we had 10 times the amount of ordinary volume on the Web site," a spokesman says. "There were 300,000 to 400,000 users online at any given time." MSNBC also cut to "bare-bones-only news reporting" on its Web site, stripping graphics, video, and interactive content. The company added Web servers, even farming some of the job out to external vendors, including Akamai Technologies Inc.

Overall traffic levels quickly returned to nearly normal as system administrators dealt with the problem. "The really big dip in reachability lasted only about an hour," says John Quarterman, chief technology officer for Matrix.Net. "Some of the overloaded Web servers adapted their content to serve more users, and after awhile, users stopped trying so hard to reach overloaded servers and went elsewhere."

Wednesday was not expected to be an easier day for Web-site operators. The New York Times was expecting the day-after traffic to be higher than on the day of the disaster, as more Americans turn to sources other than television coverage.

Beyond the demands of surging traffic, Internet access has also been negatively affected by the physical damage to New York and the subsequent fires and power loss.

"There are lingering effects," Quarterman says. "In Manhattan, there are some nodes that just aren't there anymore or have no power."

With power out on much of the island, many servers are working on rapidly dwindling battery power. Machines are overheating as air conditioning shuts down or becomes clogged by debris. Several co-location centers in the World Trade Center are gone. And NYC.gov, the home page of the city government, is down.

But overall, most of the Internet infrastructure in Manhattan is still working, Quarterman says. "Automatic rerouting took place more or less immediately" when damage did occur, he says. "The Internet was designed to deal with problems where some of the infrastructure isn't there, and it worked well."


Subscribe to RSS


Advertisement


CAREER CENTER
Ready to take that job and shove it?



TechCareers

SEARCH
Function:

Keyword(s):

State:
SPONSOR
RECENT JOB POSTINGS
CAREER NEWS
Go beyond Google and get vertical. These specialized search sites will help you find the business information you need -- fast.

Ari Balogh was named to the post of chief technology officer as the companys for a "realignment" of employees.





Subscription Info
Apply for a free 52-week subscription to InformationWeek (a $199 value)

Last Name:

First Name:

Title:

Company Name:

City:

Business Address:

Zip:

State:

Email Address:

NOTE: Offer valid for U.S., U.S. possessions, & Canada only