The Internet is mostly run by private companies. It will be hard to compleatly take it down. Maybe the will just take down DNS. In which case, learn how to manually set the IPs of your favorite websites in your hosts file. You can test by manually breaking your DNS server settings. Just remember to disable the hosts file entries when it is over, as they sometimes change and you want to be using DNS to get these changes.
Good question. I am not sure how broken BGP, or DNS can go unfixed for 10 days, unless some of these companies were cooperative.
Regardless, people within the same backbone should still be able to communicate with each other. For example, within a major cable network provider. Run your own Matrix server and share the IP with friends on the same ISP.
The Internet is mostly run by private companies. It will be hard to compleatly take it down. Maybe the will just take down DNS. In which case, learn how to manually set the IPs of your favorite websites in your hosts file. You can test by manually breaking your DNS server settings. Just remember to disable the hosts file entries when it is over, as they sometimes change and you want to be using DNS to get these changes.
You take the internet down by hosing the BGP at the handful of peering points.
BGP is the internets' Achille's Heel, always has been.
And Those BGP points are managed by network operators that are globalist owned/controlled?
Good question. I am not sure how broken BGP, or DNS can go unfixed for 10 days, unless some of these companies were cooperative.
Regardless, people within the same backbone should still be able to communicate with each other. For example, within a major cable network provider. Run your own Matrix server and share the IP with friends on the same ISP.