So you think it may not be coincidence that the explosion was outside an AT&T 
building?  At first I thought they were talking about the "Batman" office 
building, but there's apparently a switching or transmission center right at 
the site of the explosion.

In just our little WISP corner of the world, I do worry about how dependent our 
CBRS service is on cloud based services like domain proxy and SAS.  If those go 
down, customers lose service within 5 minutes, and I'm not sure what the backup 
plan is, other than go back to Part 90 operation.

-----Original Message-----
From: AF <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Matt Hoppes
Sent: Saturday, December 26, 2020 9:53 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [AFMUG] Data center Security

I hesitated on where to post this. Not that I think I’m giving anyone any ideas 
- but still. 

What happened in Nashville has actually been a concern of mine for some time. 

Look at 9/11. Huge loss of life yes. But that took a lot of effort and planning 
and getting through security and learning to basically fly a massive tin 
projectile. 

How much more damage could a small group do with 5 or 6 vans loaded with 
explosives in a coordinated attack on say: NYC, 401N Broad, Ashburn, St Louis, 
Chicago and San Jose?

Throw in a few major CO switching offices in some major towns. 

You’ve caused mass disaster. Minimal planning. And now with 911 services out 
and data crippled you could do something else even more major. 
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