Undersea in a sentence as an adjective

It may take advanced equipment to tap an undersea cable, but not to cut one.

What exactly do you think is going to happen if someone proves that the US tapped their undersea cables?

The Chinese do not need any agreements to tap undersea cables and are more than capable of doing just that.

Headline two years in the future: "US plans submarine mission to tap into undersea cable."

Complete guess, but it might be harder to maintain overland cables running through the Rockies than undersea cables.

Those undersea cables could prove to be life-changers for people with ambition in Nairobi and I'd love to work with them sometime.

I came here to mention that the NSA/Navy could already tap undersea fiber ... and to implore everyone to encrypt their traffic.

When your opponent uses Navy submarines to tap undersea cables right under the Soviets' noses, you probably shouldn't trust your leased fiber with unencrypted data. This interception could occur where undersea cables make landfall without any datacenter antics.

As someone reliant on undersea cables for connectivity, there have been several suspicious/unexpected cable breaks that could have been used to install interception equipment over the years. that is, if they even bother to install it on the cable itself and don't just force the endpoints to have their black boxes installed.

Passive undersea fiber monitoring is well within the means of more than a few intelligence operations and quite popular. They're in international water, unguarded, unrealistic to regularly inspect and they can be modified to leak just enough light to see every bit while being pretty difficult to detect.

> there have been proposals to link it via undersea transmission cables to the European grid A transmission cable is sometimes discussed, but so far Iceland has been taking advantage of the fact that aluminum smelting is a workable way to congeal cheap power into transportable money. Aluminum smelting is typically by electrolysis [1], and aluminum is light and compact relative to its value so easy to ship, so smelting aluminum and exporting it essentially allows you to "export electricity".

Quote Examples using Undersea

An undersea cable is totally different. It is not a search of anybody's "person" but a search of something containing signals that people are transmitting out into the world. There are four specific things enumerated in the 4th amendment: someone's house, person, papers, and effects. It is clear how searching a phone in someone's pocket is a search both of their person and their effects. But signals transmitted out into the world does not fit neatly into any of those four categories. For example if those signals were transmitted via radio versus fiber optic cable, would it be a "search" to listen in on them? Now, the language of the case is relevant in that it suggests the Court may be open to a more expansive reading of the 4th amendment when it comes to digital data. There is no way the conservatives on the court would favor extraterritorial application of the Constitution with regards to undersea wiretaps, but it could bode well for challenges to domestic surveillance.

Anonymous

Undersea definitions

adjective

beneath the surface of the sea

See also: submarine