Both Egypt and Libya demonstrate that concentration of Internet infrastructure under state ownership—in Egypt, all submarine fiber backhaul terminated at a single facility, the Ramses Exchange, controlled by the state telecommunications provider—makes country-wide BGP-based shutdowns technically straightforward. The authors conclude that the small number of state-controlled parties involved in international connectivity was the critical enabling factor, not any novel technical capability.
From 2011-dainotti-analysis — Analysis of Country-wide Internet Outages Caused by Censorship
· §5.1.1
· 2011
· Internet Measurement Conference
Implications
Infrastructure risk assessments for circumvention deployments should explicitly count the number of upstream ASes a target country uses for international connectivity; countries with fewer than five upstream transit ASes face substantially elevated single-order kill-switch risk.
Satellite and stratospheric (balloon/HAPS) delivery channels are the only architecturally sound fallback for countries where all domestic ISPs connect to the global Internet through a single state-controlled exchange point.