The Internet is a series of tubes ... that are sometimes attacked by sharks.
Reports of sharks biting the undersea cables that zip our data around the world date to at least 1987. That's when the New York Times reported that "sharks have shown an inexplicable taste for the new fiber-optic cables that are being strung along the ocean floor linking the United States, Europe, and Japan."
Now it seems Google is biting back. According to Network World's Brandon Butler, a Google product manager explained at a recent event that the company has taken to wrapping its trans-Pacific underwater cables in Kevlar to guard against shark bites.
Google confirmed to me that its newest generation of undersea cables comes wrapped in special protective yarn and steel wire armor-and that the goal is to protect against cable cuts, including possible shark attacks.
To digress for a moment, it's not clear that the coating Google is using is actually Kevlar, per se. A little searching on Google's own handy website reveals that the company actually holds a patent of its own for a material called "polyethylene protective yarn."