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I really don't see what's the point of defending Telecom Malaysia, a plenty of people manage to operate their equipment in a manner that doesn't break the internet.

Perhaps the point is that Malaysia is part of the world, and we can't realistically expect to exclude them from the internet, any more than we could expect to exclude them from the commercial airline system. Their network people answer to their customers in Malaysia, not to us nerds on HN. (Also ISTM many Malaysians are more concerned about earthquakes caused by exhibitionist tourists [0] than about internet stability.) I guess in some way TM answer to their upstream in GLBX, and they could get "demoted" in some way, but GLBX isn't going to just walk away from an income stream.

Many times when one node is blamed for network-wide bad results, the nodes that connect it to the network might be blamed fairly, as well.

[0] http://www.bernama.com/bernama/v8/newsindex.php?id=1142543



> Also ISTM many Malaysians are more concerned about earthquakes caused by exhibitionist tourists [0] than about internet stability.

Malaysian here. More Malaysians care about the 18 people who died on Mt Kinabalu from the earthquake, than about the antics of a few douchey tourists.

As for Telekom Malaysia, TM has the same reputation that BT has in the UK - shitty service, but Malaysians are stuck with them. I don't think it surprised anyone that TM caused this fuckup.


I'm definitely not saying we should disconnect Malaysia from the internet, that'd be terrible.

Despite the name, TM is a private company. I really wouldn't have any issues with (temporarily) disconnecting them, or alternatively fining them. GLBX should definitely be able to do both of those.

Of course best case scenario would involve Malaysian government intervention. (As unlikely as that sounds in a country that seems to be ran by people that believe in magic)


I really wouldn't have any issues with (temporarily) disconnecting them, or alternatively fining them. GLBX should definitely be able to do both of those.

If that language is in their contracts, then sure. Such penalties might not be made public, however, or there may be different enforcement mechanisms in place. The internet (and all global commerce, really) functions anyway.

Of course best case scenario would involve Malaysian government intervention.

Given how often "Malaysian government intervention" entails unconscionable violence, I cannot agree.


Based on previous experiences I'd imagine their contract would allow early termination in case of abuses such as this,but of course this is speculation.

I definitely didn't intend that anybody should be executed, but at most fined (or imprisoned for a reasonable amount of time if this was in fact intentional, but that's unlikely).




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