Sunday, November 18, 2012

TWO WAY VSAT INTERNET, VOICE, DATA VIA SATELLITE ...

From Wikipedia

Facebook, Twitter and YouTube played important roles in bringing news to the world audience during the revolt. Facebook remains a favorite platform to view and comment on the news.
Internet users
904,604 (2010)
Fixed broadband Internet subscriptions
72,800 subscriptions, 98th in the world, 1.5 subscriptions per 100 inhabitants (2010)
Internet hosts
17,787 hosts, 122nd in the world (2011)
IPv4 addresses allocated
299,008 addresses, 105th in the world, 44.4 per 1000 inhabitants (2012)
Top-level domain
.ly
The Internet and telecommunications are mainly run by the government through a semi-private telecommunication company Libya Telecom & Technology. The company moderates and controls the use of the Internet in Libya.
Internet Service Providers (ISPs)
23 ISPs (1999)[dated info]
Libya Telecom & Technology (LTT) - a state-owned telecommunications company
Al-Manarah - leading Libyan online community
All Libyan Blogs - blog aggregator
Bayt Al Shams (BsISP)
Modern World Telecom (MWC)

The Internet and the civil war

See also: Free speech in the media during the 2011 Libyan civil war

In 2006 Reporters Without Borders (RWB) removed Libya from their list of Internet enemies after a fact-finding visit found no evidence of Internet censorship. The OpenNet Initiative?s 2007?2008 technical test results contradicted that conclusion, however.In 2009 ONI classified Internet filtering in Libya as selective in the political area and as no evidence in social, conflict/security, and Internet tools.

Prior to the civil war, Internet filtering under the Gaddafi regime had become more selective, focusing on a few political opposition Web sites. This relatively lenient filtering policy coincided with what was arguably a trend toward greater openness and increasing freedom of the press. However, the legal and political climate continued to encourage self-censorship in online media.

On 18 February 2011, the day after the first protests that were to lead to the 2011 Libyan civil war, Libya appeared to have withdrawn all of its BGP prefix announcements from the Internet for a short period, cutting it off from the rest of the global Internet. The prefix were re-advertised six hours later.

There was no traffic for several hours on 19 and 20 February. Service picked up over the next few days to almost normal levels until, at 6:00am on 3 March, traffic effectively ceased (except for very limited satellite links). The government had severed the underwater backbone fibre-optic cable that runs along the coast, linking networks in the east and servers in the west of the country. Engineers reckon the break is between the cities of Misrata and Khoms, and may be a physical or electronic rupture.

From 10 July traffic began increasing again, and after a brief shutdown on 15 July, it was reaching about 15% of its pre-17 February levels up to 22 August, the day Tripoli fell to the rebels. Traffic began increasing again at that point, and as of 2 September was reaching daily levels in excess of 50% and often as high as 75% of pre-war levels.

The overthrow of the Gaddafi regime in the fall of 2011 ended an era of censorship. In 2012 RWB removed Libya from its list of countries under surveillance.



LIBYA is within our satellite KU band service coverage via SES-4, AM44 and ARABSAT. See footprints below

See above the Middle East Map and trace Libya to the satellite coverage below. This means Libya people can avail of a two way data, voice, video and internet communications to the rest of the globe via any of these covering communication satellites.

What will be required are an ODU (Out Door Unit) composed of satellite dish antenna (VSAT), penetrating or non penetrating mount which can be aligned to the serving satellite by qualified engineer in no time; and an IDU (In Door Unit) composed of satellite modem or?receiver/transmitter and a connection to the end user LAN (Local Area Network).?

Please send us inquiry by filling up the form below if you wish one of our sales team to contact and provide you more information.

Source: http://twowayinternetsatellitecommunications.blogspot.com/2012/11/two-way-satellite-internet-for-libya.html

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