bogzz a day ago

Well my boss is in a cabin in the wilderness somewhere and his only access to the internet is via Starling, so that's great news!

  • delichon a day ago

    I've heard of IP over pigeons, but using starlings is innovative.

    • ronsor a day ago

      Starling is just the product name. It's still IPoAC under the hood.

      • arm32 a day ago

        Wrong. His actual name is Jimbob, and he's a pretty bird.

    • quirk a day ago

      Notorious for dropping packets.

      • hedora a day ago

        That’s what those are? The internet truly is a filthy place.

      • jvm___ a day ago

        African or European packets

      • cozzyd 21 hours ago

        That's why you should use Turkey Clutch Protocol rather than Unladen Duck Protocol.

      • ta1243 a day ago

        RFC 2549 was written to cope with that

    • bogzz a day ago

      Falcon-related packet loss is a recurring issue.

      • Rooster61 a day ago

        This is even funnier when you imagine Falcon rockets running into Starlink satellites

      • slater a day ago

        A small price to pay in return for speed increase!

    • cardamomo a day ago

      We've got a family of nuthatches that set up an extensive neighborhood mesh network. Quite impressive!

    • hk1337 a day ago

      Their Starlord is the key to keeping them on task.

    • Tade0 a day ago

      They're reliable, provided there's a cherry tree orchard at the destination.

    • anjel a day ago

      Starlings are lower bandwidth than pigeons

    • throwaway889900 a day ago

      Sometimes you have to keep repeating a packet, they're very good at it.

  • asadotzler a day ago

    I too am in the wilderness and Starlink is my only broadband, but I was smart enough to keep my 1.5Mbps WISP connection (radio mounted 170' up one of my redwoods) so I'm still in good shape for basic communication, even some streaming and videoconferencing, though those aren't great this morning.

    Also, after my Starlink terminal rebooted a few times on its own over the last hour or so, things are looking good again.

    • sakopov a day ago

      Are you using something like a CradlePoint for your WISP?

      • galaxy_gas a day ago

        If it 1,5 Mb and radio mount on a tower I would more guessing toward the side of PTP line of sight Link or such Mikrotik, Unifi instead of cellular cradlepoint.

        • esseph a day ago

          In the US:

          Ubiquiti, Cambium, probably not Tarana because that's way too expensive for a 1.5Mbps sub. Mikrotik radios are fairly rare here, but the routers and switches are everywhere.

          • galaxy_gas a day ago

            Thats interesting ! Mikrotik routers and switches are very cheap, I wonder why they one product line is extremely common but the radios are rare rather than roughly equivalent spread ?

            • bcrl a day ago

              Mikrotik has not (yet?) gone down the path of shipping sector radios supporting massive MIMO (Multiple Input Multiple Output -- an 8x8 array can deliver 8 times as much data as 1 stream within the same channel size) as vendors like Cambium have. The additional capacity on tower sectors from additional streams combined with MU-MIMO (Multi-User MIMO that transmits to multiple subscriber radios at the same time based on the number of streams the transmitter supports combined with client radios that are typically 2x2) is a great way to gain capacity where spectrum is exhausted. Higher order QAM support like the new 12 bits per symbol modulation in 802.11be tends not to be so useful for WISPs as getting the SNR to the level required to support it tends to be is challenging, especially in 6 GHz spectrum where transmit power limitations require much higher gain antennas for client radios (at least here in Canada where EIRP is limited to 36dBm).

              Mikrotik is still quite heavily used for their routers and switches among WISPs. They are the most affordable vendor for 100Gbps switches. Pity we don't have a better open source software stack for their hardware.

              Ubiquiti is also actively neglecting the WISP market. Anything that isn't UniFi seems to be mostly abandoned these days.

            • esseph a day ago

              Just generally not as reliable or as advanced as the competition for not much more, generally. They are doing some interesting work with LTE in Latvia though.

  • whiteboardr a day ago

    Hasn’t he heard of ravens? Much more reliable.

    • rchard2scout a day ago

      Yeah, but all they say is "nevermore".

  • acrophiliac a day ago

    Digression ... you must be using "wilderness" in it's colloquial form, because technically, if he's in a cabin he can't be in wilderness. Federally designated wilderness areas don't allow permanent human habitation.

    • BHSPitMonkey a day ago

      Furthermore, the planet we are on cannot possibly be in space. Space is mostly empty, has no breathable atmosphere, there are no trees or grocery stores there, etc.; Earth is quite the opposite.

    • gridder a day ago

      The cabin is located in the wilderness, not part of it, and it’s real wilderness, not a wilderness designated area

ozten a day ago

Pro-tip: Don't host your status / outage page on your own infrastructure. We learned this lesson the hard way at AWS with S3.

  • chrisstanchak a day ago

    True, but nothing tells the story quite like a "no healthy upstream" status page

  • connicpu a day ago

    Starlink.com is hosted on Azure judging by its DNS records

  • AdamJacobMuller a day ago

    I broadly agree with what you're saying, but, that's not the issue here.

    They don't even have a dedicated status/outage page, afaik.

    The website being down is a more classic problem. The outage probably increased traffic to their website by 1000x if not more and the infrastructure for the website simply couldn't cope.

    Good lesson on keeping your status infrastructure simple and on something which is highly scalable.

    Having a CDN where the main page of their site was 99% cached globally would have probably mitigated this issue.

  • belter a day ago

    Pro-tip: Host your status/outage page on your own infrastructure... :-) If you can't reach it...You are down :-)

    • Scoundreller 19 hours ago

      It’s like when our vendor’s tech support number tells you you’re 300th in queue (or busy cuz their lines are saturated) instead of the usual 2nd or 3rd.

      You just hang up cuz you know it’s everyone.

  • jackdawipper a day ago

    maybe its a double double triple bluff

  • dmix a day ago

    How would you host a status page on Starlink? Are there web servers that are only connected to a satellite connection in house or something? Or is this just speculation that's how their marketing website works.

    • ianburrell a day ago

      Starlink has servers for the website and subscriber sites. Importantly, they have servers for controlling the satellite network. They also have multiple gateways for satellites to connect to the network.

      A problem in their network would take down the sites, and maybe the control plane for satellites.

    • geoffeg a day ago

      Starlink still has infrastructure outside the satellites to run normal company stuff. If they screwed up something in their core routing system, or DNS, etc it could affect everything.

      • dmix 12 hours ago

        Ah good point

    • sneak a day ago

      Starlink runs a terrestrial network to support the vehicles obviously. They have to do peering at POPs in cages on the ground like any other ISP.

Rooster61 a day ago

Curious as to what could cause a global outage like that. The system consists of birds in the air and individual ground stations. There's no big choke point that I'm aware of that could cause the whole shebang to go dark. Am I missing something here?

  • dave_universetf a day ago

    BGP is the canonical way to take your entire global network offline within seconds. Glancing at BGP looking glasses, Starlink's prefixes seem to still be announced, but there could still be an accidental blackhole or routing loop within their AS, or something broken in one of their transit providers.

    No idea if that's what's going on, but routing protocols are one of a few effectively global control planes that can go wrong very quickly like this.

    • indigodaddy a day ago

      If it were BGP/routing, you would think we'd be able to still get a signal and the modem would think it's healthy (although maybe not if the issue prevented us from obtaining our public IP), we just wouldn't be able to route to any dst. In the current case we don't have a signal (orange light on the modem)

      • dave_universetf a day ago

        Does the orange light specifically mean no RF link at all? Or does it include anything that prevents the modem from getting an IP address and route configuration? If the latter, BGP could still be at fault if it took out access to the control planes on the ground. But again all just guessing, from the outside all I see is the BGP routes are still being announced, and everyone seems to be seeing 100% packet loss and zero traffic.

        • indigodaddy a day ago

          Right, good point that could be the case, those were just my assumptions and probably jumping to conclusions on my part speculating that orange means no signal (don't actually have any idea :) ). Imagine it could be any of what you said too.

      • ta1243 a day ago

        Yes, before the drop out my traffic was coming from a downlink station in Bulgaria, on an IP on AS14593

        Traceroute from "the internet" back to that IP reaches AS14593 just fine, and my endpoint doesn't get beyond the first hop of the local starlink router.

        Whatever it is, it doesn't look like a peering problem

        • indigodaddy a day ago

          https://mtr.ping.pe ftw for MTR from "the internet" ? :)

          • ta1243 16 hours ago

            From various monitoring points I have on multiple internet connections.

            One of the promises of starlink was it would stay in space as long as possible before being downlinked, giving far lower latency, alas that hasn't happened yet, and traffic will run thousands of miles in the wrong direction before being downlinked. For example from one location to another I have 360ms via Starlink but just 200ms rtt via local provision (5g p2p wireless then optical). On another it used to downlink in Lagos, but now it downlinks in Nairobi, meaning traffic to Lagos routes Nairobi -> Marseille -> Lagos, taking far longer than it used to. A shame really.

    • oceanplexian a day ago

      A network of satellites gives you entirely new and exciting ways of taking your network offline, such as bricking them with a firmware update and no way to actually get up there and fix it.

      • halfmatthalfcat a day ago

        Imagine being that dev who pushed the bad patch - Crowdstrike but x100

        • ethbr1 a day ago

          Crowdstrike’s fuckup was at the company level.

          Whoever is doing immediate global deployments and/or any prod deployments without verified testing is just wrong as a corporate culture.

    • chasd00 a day ago

      it's pretty amazing the amount of damage a BGP oopsie can do. Also, you can fit pretty much all the BGP admins for the entire Internet in one large room.

      • hdgvhicv a day ago

        If by “room” you mean “Wembley stadium”, maybe.

      • airspresso a day ago

        Messing up with BGP makes you feel alive, that’s for sure.

        But hey, if you haven’t caused an incident yet, that just means you’re still in onboarding. Those SLA downtime budgets are there to be spent.

    • hedora a day ago

      I rebooted my terminal and I can’t tell for sure if it sees any satellites. It looks like it doesn't.

      It says it didn’t, and it says the “which way is down” thing hasn’t converged. Occasionally, the signal to noise ratio light in the app goes gray which means < 3.

      It also rebooted itself.

      Before the first reboot, 30% of pings went through. It’s almost like the azimuth or some other timely but cached data was corrupted.

    • chrisstanchak a day ago

      It's always a bad route that was introduced during a planned upgrade

  • 0xffff2 a day ago

    I'm hardly an expert, but it seems like usually stuff like this happens to major backbones because of a bad configuration being rolled out too fast. Maybe the pushed a bad DNS/BGP/<insert networking acronym here> update to every satellite and/or ground station near simultaneously.

  • mixdup a day ago

    The fleet of satellites is still managed centrally, even if the physical infrastructure is distributed globally to be able to see satellites in different hemispheres, at some point they are very likely managing these from a single control plane

    • AdamJacobMuller a day ago

      I wonder what they do for out of band on satellites.

      It's not like you can have a tech go out and reboot it or reinstall windows.

      • cyanydeez a day ago

        Their space infra is all disposable. Its GUGD.

        • lxgr a day ago

          Each individual satellite, yes. But killing all of them at the same time, e.g. due to a bad software or configuration update, might be the end of the company.

          • cyanydeez a day ago

            yeah, that would be an interesting dillema. Lucky for us, they technically arn't designed to be anything but disposable, so they'll fall from the heavens eventually.

  • modeless a day ago

    Cyberattack. Given the usage in active wars, it's a big juicy target. There's precedent too; Russia hacked Viasat at the start of the Ukraine war. They actually bricked user terminals in that attack.

    • AnotherGoodName a day ago

      If it is a hack there can't be that many suspects, just narrow it down to people/groups/countries that hate Elon Musk.

      • ElectronCharge a day ago

        Sure, it's too bad that almost all of that hatred is due to propaganda instead of anything real.

        If anyone has benefited humanity over the last couple of decades, it's Elon Musk! I'd argue he's done more than anyone!

    • oblio a day ago

      FYI, Vodafone and other major European mobile networks were down during the last few days.

      This is hybrid warfare, not a coincidence.

      Russia needs to learn some manners, the hard way.

      • lxgr a day ago

        As a former customer, I have complete faith in Vodafone’s ability to take themselves offline without any external help.

      • elzbardico a day ago

        Incredibly, Americans still think they have any chance of teaching Russia or China "manners". The hubris of a decadent empire.

        And of course, they have to downvote to hell. They need to keep the illusion that the US is still the most powerful military, the most powerful economy, and that AI will save their hegemony.

        Really sad.

        • hdgvhicv 17 hours ago

          There’s no doubt the US military is by far the most powerful military ever seen. Even accounting for technical progress it’s arguably more powerful than the Romans or Mongols.

          What is the illusion is that a powerful military is enough to win a conflict.

        • oblio a day ago

          I'm Romanian.

      • holoduke a day ago

        For now Russia is teaching us on how to use dishwasher chips in a smart way.

      • cluckindan a day ago

        [flagged]

        • reaperducer a day ago

          The article you linked to states 2,500 reports on DD.

          Does that count as "major" now?

          • cluckindan a day ago

            Why wouldn’t it count if multiple operators are down for multiple thousands of people for several hours? Not even emergency numbers were working.

            • reaperducer a day ago

              2,500 people out of 70,000,000 isn't "major." And your own link states that 999 service was restored in 61 minutes.

              Emergency service lines go down somewhere in the world almost every day. Often for longer than that.

              HN didn't used to be a place for people who like to gin up conspiracies, and engage in speculative hyperbole.

              • cluckindan 19 hours ago

                The UK isn’t just somewhere in the world, but whatever, they have worse connectivity in Russia for sure.

      • x______________ a day ago

        Not a very technical root cause analysis you have there. Can you leave geopolitics out of it until it's confirmed?

        Other social media networks may tolerate this but this is not HN worthy.

        • x______________ a day ago

          My most downvoted post by telling people to keep geopolitics out of a technical discussion. Gfy, thought you were all better.

            Starlink VP of engineering Michael Nicolls tweeted that the service has "now mostly recovered from the network outage" after two and a half hours.
          
            "The outage was due to failure of key internal software services that operate the core network. We apologize for the temporary disruption in our service; we are deeply committed to providing a highly reliable network, and will fully root cause this issue and ensure it does not occur again," the tweet, posted at 3:23 p.m. PT, says.
          
          https://www.cnet.com/news-live/starlink-restored-after-hours...

          Edit: funny, can't even access the replies..

        • LunaSea a day ago

          [flagged]

          • reaperducer a day ago

            A geopolitical reason could very well explain this "coincidence".

            The parent's concern is with the "could" in your sentence.

            Unlike other web sites, the people of HN used to pride themselves on presenting facts, not speculation. Rumors were left for places like Facebook and now Reddit.

  • lxgr a day ago

    They still have tons of ground-based infrastructure that has all the regular failure modes. I suspect the satellites also route IP traffic statically, and they only do so to a fixed set of ground gateways all operated by Starlink (compared to e.g. Iridium, which makes in-space switching decisions and can at least continue ongoing phone calls between two devices without actually needing a reachable ground gateway).

    National telcos manage to take themselves out countrywide from time to time too, so I'd assume the same usual suspects apply: Routing problems, botched global configuration changes etc.

    If anything, due to centralization, ubiquitous and effectively free connectivity, and centralization/automation of configuration changes, the blast radius of any given error or malicious action has probably been steadily increasing over the years.

  • markasoftware a day ago

    Same things have been said of eg the massive Facebook years ago. It was DNS, which affected service discovery across the whole org. The massive Roblox outage was also caused by service discovery failure (Consul). If your machines don't know which other machines to talk to, shit goes bad fast.

    • supportengineer a day ago

      This happens enough that it seems like someone would have created a better alternative.

      • airspresso a day ago

        Everything has failure modes, the only difference is how hard they are to trigger

  • erulastiel a day ago

    A bad configuration pushed to network

    • x2tyfi 12 hours ago

      Almost always. Most people look at global networks like black magic and don’t realize this.

      For most large businesses, 90%+ of major network events are caused by internally-driven network config changes.

      Depending on how far along the business is towards automation, a proportion of the 90% can be attributed to a human going “off script” - I.e.: making a change that had not been reviewed.

    • chasd00 a day ago

      that's going to be a lot of crew dragon trips to go hold the power button down for 5 seconds on all those satellites to reset to factory default.

  • x______________ a day ago

    My money is on a misconfigured switch or hub that allowed a broadcast storm that shut down all of their edge devices!

    Additional points for a user to cause the loop by plugging an rj-45 where they weren't supposed to, despite no warning or label telling them not to!

    • heraldgeezer a day ago

      Are you saying they are one big L2 domain?

      I love when devs talk about networking.

      • esseph a day ago

        They said "hub"

        Heh.

    • zamadatix a day ago

      I think the network putting out warning labels to prevent loops is probably worse off than the place that just forgot to leave some form of loop prevention enabled.

    • cyanydeez a day ago

      ...in space?

      • _verandaguy a day ago

        Cat 9 cables are rated for low crosstalk links in LEO, though I'm not sure how Starlink solved the problem where the cable would tend to wind around the earth because of the speed difference between LEO and the Earth's rotation.

        • saltcured a day ago

          Well, obviously the sats have to juggle cables. Only connect to one for a little bit and then toss it to the next in the train...

  • nothacking_ a day ago

    I'd bet on a bad update or configuration change. (likely one that prevents the affected systems from reaching the internet and being automatically rolled back)

  • kevinqi a day ago

    I mean, why do systems go down at all? a lot of big outages are simple misconfiguration or cascading failure from what seemed like small changes. It's rarely due to the physical constraints of the world

  • nikanj a day ago

    The usual dark triad: DNS, BGP and IPv6

  • system2 a day ago

    It is always the DNS.

  • sekh60 a day ago

    /s not-/s BGP?

  • scoofy a day ago

    Kessler syndrome?

  • beefnugs 18 hours ago

    Too many HEILs near the rack power buttons

  • FollowingTheDao a day ago

    I was browsing Reddit and X and a lot of people saying that their base stations couldn’t even find a satellite. I find that pretty odd and can’t make sense out of it if it was simply a network problem.

    You would expect to be able to at least connect to a satellite unless the satellite has no Internet connection so it does not make itself available to be connected to you.

    Anyone have any deeper knowledge about this for the curious?

  • ben_w a day ago

    There is a non-zero probability that Musk personally tried to use Grok to make and roll out a software update.

    • JumpCrisscross a day ago

      Unless Musk is outside the country, the outage started in the late morning [1]. If this happened at 3AM, your hypothesis would be more likely.

      [1] https://www.pcmag.com/news/spacexs-starlink-hit-by-major-out...

      • ben_w a day ago

        Hmm. It may be that I myself am too tired right now, but I'm afraid I don't follow the logic on that one?

        But thanks for the link anyway.

      • cyanydeez a day ago

        Took ketamine, went blackout at 3Am, told hself future me can handle yhis, scheduled deployment in morning. Future self woke up this afternoon completely unaware.

almostdigital a day ago

I'm posting this from my Starlink connection, been working fine here. I'm close to the arctic circle so maybe the polar orbiting satellites are not affected

  • gmiller123456 a day ago

    They're all the same satellites. It's actually impossible to have a satellite just orbit at the poles.

    • almostdigital a day ago
      • ash_091 a day ago

        Seems to prove GPs point?

        There are satellites on a polar orbit, which will cover connections at the poles, but those satellites still cover a lot of non-polar ground.

        If polar orbiting satellites are still working we'd expect to see intermittent or degraded connectivity away from the poles rather than complete outage?

        • almostdigital a day ago

          I saw some people report that their dishes are pointing in unusual directions so it would explain that, and that my service is fine since I only use the polar orbiting ones ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    • ncr100 a day ago

      Not without using a LOT of fuel .. <3

  • munchler a day ago

    What a great writing prompt! Would love to read read the rest of this as a short story. Any takers?

    Edit: Wow, that’s the fastest any of my HN posts have ever been buried. Still, as an old guy, I have to say it’s pretty awesome to be living in a future where polar satellites can keep someone in touch with the rest of civilization.

    • guy2345 a day ago

      why would there be a rest to this

rossdavidh a day ago

So, if (just spitballing here) Russia were to have wanted to take out Starlink in order to handicap Ukrainian operations, and they didn't want to do something as visible as actually taking out the satellites, what would be the most likely way for them to have done it? And how would we be able to check if that's what happened?

No idea if this is plausible at all, just raising the question for anyone who knows more about this system than I do.

  • Zigurd a day ago

    I would still bet against the Russians taking down all of Starlink. If they had a zero day that could do that, they'd save it for just before a big war.

    But Russian low-intensity hybrid warfare, including infiltration and sabotage, is very real. Particularly in Europe and especially so in eastern Europe. There's a lot of nasty things going on in border areas that isn't widely reported.

    • whizzter a day ago

      Things get patched over time, Nato has their own comms systems whilst Ukraine relies on this third party, and the US just accepted the EU funded weapons sale so their Trump advantage seems to have disappeared with his patience in P's promises.

      Thus using the weakness to launch a coordinated summer offensive now for a decisive breakthrough before US weapons supplies reaches full speed again seems like a reasonably good choice.

      Conquering Ukraine is the key for restoring the USSR, Belarus is already under the yoke and Khz,etc won't dare resist after Ukr falls. P sees a victory here as moving the linchpin that makes him immortal in historybooks.

    • sneak a day ago

      No good way to test your PoC without burning your 0day; I don’t imagine that the OV firmware is public or even “available”.

  • viraptor a day ago

    > what would be the most likely way for them to have done it?

    Ensure Starlink hires an agent. Establish skills / access permissions. Push an update which bricks both the update system and the running system, so the satellites become useless.

    • newsclues a day ago

      They would exfiltrate any secret technology first, then do their best to burn the whole network.

      Potentially you could burn the constellation with reentry.

      • JumpCrisscross a day ago

        > Potentially you could burn the constellation with reentry

        Just put them into a spin with a strong propellant burn while compromising ground stations. Even if the fleet recovers, its lifespan will have been significantly reduced by the propellant expenditure.

        • m4rtink a day ago

          Spin would be indeed the most problematic, but the Starlink satellites only have krypton hall thrusters. Very efficient but also very low thrust - you you could not actually significantly waste fuel this way even if you wanted to.

      • viraptor a day ago

        You'd need to have actual knowledge of the hardware systems and serious access to do anything interesting with thrusters. It may be possible. But just bricking the updates is likely way simpler and less protected.

        • newsclues a day ago

          You have the resources of a country to support any activity. Need computer experts? Take your pick? Astronomers? Mathematician? They have all the expertise required.

          The agent getting the right access or finding the right people on the inside and exploiting them successfully without trigger counterintelligence is the hard part.

          • viraptor a day ago

            First you'd have to extract the documentation which may not be available to everyone. I'm just saying that in limited time, the purely software side of starlink is likely much less protected from both access and changes than anything to do with thrusters usage.

      • codedokode a day ago

        Is there any secret technology in Starlink that is not taught in Russian Universities and not described in Soviet scientific works?

        • newsclues a day ago

          Fundamentally maybe not, but knowing what they are actually doing/using is still useful.

          If you can get schematics or source code, you can put it to use as well.

          And then you can also use communications logs and HR to find other human targets.

  • modeless a day ago

    It's essentially impossible for anyone to disable the Starlink network by "taking out satellites" through physical means. There aren't enough anti satellite missiles in the world to make a dent, it would cost trillions to manufacture enough, and SpaceX can launch satellites faster than anyone could manufacture interceptors anyway. And Kessler syndrome is impossible at the altitudes Starlink uses.

    Cyberattack is the only plausible way to take down Starlink.

    • gmiller123456 a day ago

      The anti-satellite devices could be deployed in the same manner as the Starlink satellites. And they wouldn't need communications equipment, so they could be lighter and cheaper to launch. And you really wouldn't need to take them all out, just enough to make communication unreliable.

      Starlink launches reduce costs by launching a bunch of satellites with similar orbits on the same vehicle, replacing one or a few satellites is going to cost a lot more per satellite. So just disrupting the network is a lot cheaper than fixing it.

      Thought the cheapest is still probably paying an existing employee to break some stuff.

      • modeless a day ago

        Taking out one or even a few dozen satellites isn't going to make communication unreliable. They can redistribute themselves to fill holes. You'd need to take out thousands, requiring hundreds of launches at least. And neither Russia nor China has reusable rockets, so the costs would be much higher than SpaceX's costs. The interceptors would take a long time to spread out to reach their targets if they were launched in groups like Starlink is, so it wouldn't be a surprise attack and SpaceX would have time to prepare. They would need to start launching on-orbit spares for each orbital shell, but there are only a few shells, not hundreds.

        And in a few years when Starship is launching Starlink, the economics will be tilted even more wildly in SpaceX's favor.

    • ponector a day ago

      >>There aren't enough anti satellite missiles in the world to make a dent, it would cost trillions to manufacture enough

      Few big nukes are enough to take out all satellites.

      • xoa a day ago

        >Few big nukes are enough to take out all satellites.

        Um, no. Not even vaguely remotely. "Thousands of satellites" is a lot by historical human space standards, but compare that to the number of cars you see every day and then remember these are spread out over an area bigger then the surface of the entire planet. Don't be fooled by the simulation maps you can find online, where the satellites and tracks are shown thousands of times bigger then they would be to scale because otherwise they couldn't be seen. They are very, very far apart. Even on the ground, "a few big nukes" wouldn't do diddly. And nukes do less, not more, damage in space. A lot of the damage enhancement effects of nukes comes from their interaction with atmosphere. In a vacuum, it's only direct radiation which falls by the square of the distance, and satellites are of course designed to handle plenty of thermal and ionizing radiation all the time already by virtue of being designed for space. But Starlink sats aren't so high that Kessler syndrome is a concern either, there's plenty of atmospheric drag to bring debris down without active boosting.

        GP is correct and I don't understand the downvotes: as far as physical resilience goes the Starlink constellation is a pretty damn hard target on an absolute basis, even before we get into the geopolitics of some country trying to shoot down US property that is also a US strategic asset.

        • baq a day ago

          > Starfish Prime caused an electromagnetic pulse (EMP) that was far larger than expected, so much larger that it drove much of the instrumentation off scale, causing great difficulty in getting accurate measurements. The Starfish Prime electromagnetic pulse also made those effects known to the public by causing electrical damage in Hawaii, about 900 miles (1,450 km) away from the detonation point, knocking out about 300 streetlights, setting off numerous burglar alarms, and damaging a telephone company microwave link. The EMP damage to the microwave link shut down telephone calls from Kauai to the other Hawaiian Islands.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starfish_Prime

          • xoa a day ago

            Yes, very good you're capable of a simplistic wikipedia search. Now I'd like you to try thinking about the paragraph you just linked for a moment: is "Hawaii", the "300 streetlights", "numerous burglar alarms", and a "microwave link" in the atmosphere (and on the ground, or indeed literally the ground) or in Earth orbit? If you read further, you'll find that the mechanism of generation involves the interaction of the gamma ray emissions with the atmosphere and Earth's magnetic field, that at 500km+ the effect are is reduced, and then find that in your example of Starfish Prime the primary damage to the satellites it affected was not due to EMP at all but rather because the test created radiation belts that damaged solar panels as satellites passed through. This would reduce design lifetime but isn't an immediate killer of everything. You'd need far more then a couple of nukes.

            Of course, purposefully detonating nuclear weapons to create large scale NEMP effects might well still disrupt Starlink to the degree that it'd effect any piece of ground electronics, because the ground effects would be far, far worse. The satellite constellation could be ok enough to still be functional at reduced capacity, but if terminals and ground stations get toasted that's not immediately helpful. But that directly leads, again, to the fact that you're talking about LAUNCHING A NUCLEAR WAR ON THE ENTIRE WORLD here. No internet is going to be doing very well!

            So yes: Starlink is pretty darn robust.

            • baq a day ago

              > Starlink is pretty darn robust.

              not saying it isn't. I was the evangelist of it in 2022 and seen the pentagon salivating at what they've seen and rightly so.

              what it isn't is indestructible, though - and we don't know the capability of nukes designed specifcally to cause the Kessler syndrome in LEO for a few years. if I was China I'd have a project for this commissioned by Jan 2023.

              • ben_w a day ago

                > we don't know the capability of nukes designed specifcally to cause the Kessler syndrome in LEO for a few years

                I wouldn't even consider a nuke for that. Energetic plasma ball resulting from nuke is not effective method to do so and any debris that survives the explosion isn't going to still be in LEO, but also no plausible deniability because it's obviously a nuke.

                Try "we launched a satelite and it RUDed (honest we pinky swear it wasn't just a loose heap of ball bearings like it appears on radar) and now LEO is marginally more dangerous".

        • sneak a day ago

          I always assumed that Starshield (DoD starlink) exists so that the DoD can make strategic geopolitical decisions (like giving satcom c&c to Ukrainian suicide drones in Crimea) without painting a target on the back of SpaceX’s big moneymaker.

          They famously did not want to get involved in the war.

          I imagine DoD having their own constellation with equivalent tech was the deal set up to give the Russians and whoever else a different set of targets to retaliate against, push comes to shove.

      • modeless a day ago

        I don't believe this is true. And of course detonating nukes in space would be an act of war against the whole world.

        • baq a day ago

          nukes optimized for EMP may be able to do this just fine.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_electromagnetic_pulse

          • modeless a day ago

            I'm aware of the existence of the EMP weapon concept. I doubt its effectiveness against modern satellites in LEO at long range.

            That very article says "The damaging effects on orbiting satellites are usually due to factors other than EMP". Also "for equipment to be affected, the weapon needs to be above the visual horizon". Given how low Starlink orbits and the fact that they are dispersed evenly over the whole Earth, the number of weapons you would need to detonate just to ensure line of sight to every satellite at a range short enough to be effective is absolutely enormous.

            • ianburrell a day ago

              Nukes produce lots of gamma and x-rays. On Earth, those are absorbed to produce the fireball. In LEO, some are absorbed by upper atmosphere to make EMP. In space, they are radiation.

              Except for military satellites like GPS, most satellites aren't hardened to deal with that much radiation. My guess is that the range would be thousands of miles.

              • oskarkk a day ago

                I wondered how much energy could pass through some area 1000 miles away from the explosion, so I made some rough calculations.

                Assumption: all energy of the nuclear explosion is radiation uniform in every direction.

                The energy E would be spreading in a sphere with area 4*pi*R^2. Area A being a part of that sphere would capture E*A/(4*pi*R^2) of energy. So with:

                  energy E = 209 PJ (Tsar bomba for an extreme example)
                 
                  area A = 1 m^2
                
                  radius of the sphere R = 1000 miles (1609 km)
                
                That would give:

                  2.09 * 10^17 J * 1 m^2 / (4 * pi * (1.609 * 10^6 m) ^ 2) = 6.4 kJ
                
                So at the distance of 1000 miles an 1 m^2 object would be exposed to 6.4 kJ of radiation. I don't know how destructive would that be. That energy would be equivalent to 6 seconds of sun irradiating a 1 m^2 area above the Earth's atmosphere, but of course sun's radiation is less dangerous (very little gamma/x-ray), and all of that radiation would be almost instant.

                From what I'm reading about high-altitude nuclear testing, it can cause artificial radiation belts around the Earth (composed of high-energy electrons). I think that may be more dangerous to satellites at distances like 1000 miles (or at any distance) than the immediate gamma/x-ray radiation.

                • ianburrell 21 hours ago

                  Radiation is measured in gray, which is 1 J absorbed by 1 kg. I can't find the conversion between flux to absorbed dose. 5 gray is fatal. If even a fraction of that energy is absorbed, it would be fatal.

                  I found that satellites get 100-1000 rad per year. Getting that much in a moment would cause problems.

                  • ben_w 10 hours ago

                    > Radiation is measured in gray, which is 1 J absorbed by 1 kg. I can't find the conversion between flux to absorbed dose. 5 gray is fatal. If even a fraction of that energy is absorbed, it would be fatal.

                    It's measured in a lot of different ways depending on the need, and the unit "sievert" is Gy times a conversion factor that depends on the kind of radiation (for equivalent dose) and which body parts (for effective dose): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sievert#Radiation_type_weighti...

                    But also, beta radiation (electrons) will be stopped by a thin sheet of tinfoil, while alpha radiation (helium-4 nuclei) by paper or the outer layer of dead skin on your body and therefore only matters if you eat a source of it, and a significant fraction of any gamma radiation you're exposed to will pass right through you without getting absorbed.

                  • oskarkk 18 hours ago

                    So, given that human body area viewed from the front is around 0.5 m^2, then a 70 kg human in space 1000 miles from the explosion would get 6.4 kJ * 0.5 / 70 kg = 45 gray. That would mean that even being a couple thousand miles away could be fatal. But that's assuming 100% of Tsar Bomba energy would be ionizing radiation, I don't know what % would that be in reality.

            • baq a day ago

              digging a bit deeper, apparently most damage is coming from irradiated material interacting with solar panels of satellites passing through the cloud. sounds like it'll work, just not immediately and not necessarily via an actual EMP.

    • cozzyd 20 hours ago

      Taking out GNSS satellites would probably also effectively take out starlink.

      User terminals rely on GNSS for timing and position and I wouldn't be surprised if the satellites did too.

    • dmonitor a day ago

      Could some kind of microwave / laser attack from a high altitude air vehicle be possible?

  • shermantanktop a day ago

    If they had that capability, they could presumably do it any time, and then Starlink would recover at some point.

    So it would make sense to combine this with some other offensive action where hampering communication would help them. Otherwise they are just poking at something just to do it... unless this were a more serious attack with long-term consequences.

  • Symmetry a day ago

    Yeah, Russia maanged to knock Viasat offline with hacking during the initial invasion. The original donated Starlinks were supposed to replace Viasat and SpaceX was surprised that they ended up being used on the front lines. Russia has certainly been trying to knock them out ever since.

    • asadotzler a day ago

      If my memory is accurate, that didn't knock Viasat offline, it only made most of Viasat's customers unable to connect, but the network was just fine, only user routers were broken.

  • _joel a day ago

    The Russians use Starlink too, saw a video on Kiev Independent that had a Ukranian drone team take out a Starlink dish atop a Russian bunker.

    • sneak a day ago

      I imagine it is illegal for Starlink to not geofence service to prevent Russians using it for exactly that purpose. Sanctions still exist, after all.

      • rossdavidh 11 hours ago

        I would not be surprised if US intelligence quietly asked Starlink to please let the Russians keep using Starlink, so long as they get to listen in.

  • newsclues a day ago

    Get an employee to take the network down from the inside.

    Either exploit existing employees or take years to seed an agent into the company.

    State level persistent attacks are well funded and have long timelines.

    • keyringlight a day ago

      I'd wonder about someone targeting Musk seeing as Starlink is one of his ventures that seems to be running well up to now while his other companies have issues. Having typed that out it seems like a spy movie plot, but that seems to be the world we're living in recently.

      • newsclues a day ago

        I don’t think musk himself would be the weakest link, as the high profile brings scrutiny and thus increased security and counterintelligence. Trying would be a good way to get the FBI to look into you.

        Easier and safer to go after unknown employees with access.

  • bamboozled a day ago

    Doesn’t the military use a different starlink or something ?

    If not and this was a cyber attack the this an attack on the USA.

  • flytyer37 a day ago

    Starlink has been supporting Russia over Ukraine (congressional investigation into this). So I would bet against Russia, but you never know. Could be rouge. Anonymous has promised in the past to mess with Musk... could be that. Well funded and some crazy good hackers.

    • rossdavidh 11 hours ago

      In terms of actual actions, Starlink has done a lot more for Ukraine than almost anyone else, since early on. Musk says stuff from time to time in order to try to keep Putin from noticing this, and pushing him out of a window or something. But his actions are that he let Ukraine use Starlink for over a year for free, and they still use it widely today.

matwood a day ago

Been using Starlink for awhile and can’t remember the last time there was an outage like this.

  • bri3d a day ago

    They were pretty common for the first few years of Starlink, but it looks like the last global coordinated outage was on May 28, 2024.

  • gdubs a day ago

    Yea it's funny because I was JUST thinking about how important StarLink has been for us here in rural Oregon. When it goes out, it's even more stark — but it hasn't happened in a very long time here.

abrahms a day ago

Interestingly, this webpage doesn't load due to "no healthy upstream" and there's no status.starlink.com . That's.. quite the outage! Interested to hear what went wrong.

  • piker a day ago

    Probably their web servers are getting hugged to death by all of their worldwide users grabbing the phone to check who to call.

Bell-47 a day ago

Wisconsin here, Before it went down, I got a notice that my IP had just been changed. It didn't say who sent the message. Im wondering if changing my IP address was part of a hack or a fix?

  • stepupmakeup a day ago

    Mine intentionally faced a obstructed area, which it has never done before (installed in the same spot for multiple years)

  • csours a day ago

    in-band notice or out-of-band?

andrewinardeer a day ago
  • LeoPanthera a day ago

    For those who refuse to use X, as we all should, this is a post from Starlink that says simply:

    "Starlink is currently in a network outage and we are actively implementing a solution. We appreciate your patience, we'll share an update once this issue is resolved."

    • shthed a day ago

      "Starlink has now mostly recovered from the network outage, which lasted approximately 2.5 hours. The outage was due to failure of key internal software services that operate the core network."

    • yahoozoo a day ago

      Or just replace x.com with xcancel.com

woutifier a day ago

A service outage meaning starlink is down globally.

Anecdotally my starlink is using more power currently than usual. And when I first looked at the app it mentioned having gotten a new public IP address.

  • silverquiet a day ago

    > Anecdotally my starlink is using more power currently

    That is interesting info - don't phones typically use a lot of power when they're trying to find a tower?

  • tiernano a day ago

    Yea. Mine is down and listed as heating. And getting a public up, not a cgnatted 100.x.x.x I usually get. Weird...

  • indigodaddy a day ago

    I get new public IPs fairly frequently (maybe once every two weeks or so?)

    • woutifier a day ago

      Indeed but in this case it coincided with starlink going down. Could be a coincidence though!

      • indigodaddy a day ago

        Yeah, that's interesting actually, I guess one could speculate that the fact that you got a new IP might mean they rolled out/restarted something at the application layer and then things went south from there perhaps

  • Scoundreller 19 hours ago

    So in AWS-speak, this is a yellow/orange status outage ?

tbeseda a day ago

I wonder if it correlates to the rollout of T-Mobile satellite services. They just exited their trial phase, so a global config update might make sense.

throwmeaway222 a day ago

Amazon missed a huge pre-sale opportunity for their future sat net.

  • wmf a day ago

    Negative marketing is risky because some day Kuiper will have an outage.

skeledrew a day ago

Well this is something new. Was wondering if my dish was broken, now seeing it's a global issue. Just over 24 hours ago the router reset (had to setup the network name and password again) and I have no idea why that happened. Somehow related?

teeray a day ago

Is this possibly related to the service outages being experienced by telecom operators in the UK?

bdavbdav a day ago

Fair bit of their website down too. Hug of death or related issue?

  • Rooster61 a day ago

    Probably hugged. It was working a short time ago

tossedsalad a day ago

Software update currently being pulled down. If not routing and terminals weren't connecting could be a terminal registration issue

tossedsalad a day ago

My terminal is pulling an update. Slowly... I would guess outage was in terminals associating with satellites properly

  • asadotzler a day ago

    Yeah. Mine did a couple of reboots automatically in the last hour and now it seems solid again.

mattrighetti a day ago

Thought it was the thunderstorm and the clouds but then I saw this :) it’s been down for more than 30m now in Italy

indigodaddy a day ago

I just checked my Starlink app and it looks like it's stuck at about 3/4 progress in "Software update". Just checked so not sure for how long it's been stuck that way, and not sure if that would be a software update for the modem or for the dish..

vondur a day ago

I brought my Starlink on a three week RV trip through the western U.S., and it was pretty impressive. I was surprised it worked well even in some wooded areas. I would’ve been pretty frustrated if it had stopped working.

wmoxam a day ago

Outages suck but for me this service has been rock solid. Much better uptime and more capable than the cellular broadband service that it replaced (Bell Canada) at a similar cost

jcadam a day ago

Yea, my house is on Starlink... so at the moment I'm working in the back room of my wife's restaurant (she has cable internet). At least I get free coffee here.

Bell-47 a day ago

Just before it went down, I got an unidentified message saying my IP address was just changed. I wonder if this was part of the issue or part of the fix???

zaik a day ago

Can't wait to watch Kevin Fang's report on this.

boringg a day ago

Hopefully back up soon. Its a pretty spectacular product.

ColoradoJoe a day ago

Iam in Colorado. Lost service around 2pm mountain.

nabla9 a day ago

I bet it's configuration error, failed SW upgrade, or Russian sabotage in that order.

zoid_ a day ago

Starlink is back up in the UK

thallium205 a day ago

Business tier customers get a 20% discount this month for the SLA violation!

basfo a day ago

Don't worry, just press and hold the power button on the satellites until they turn off, then release and press it again to power them back on. Should be fine.

gitfan86 a day ago

Config error, being rolled back now

ta1243 a day ago

Mine returned 2132G

taeric a day ago

This happened as I was taking a brief dive on my networking stack. Been seeing "iwlwifi 0000:05:00.0: Unhandled alg: 0x71b " in my syslog spamming heavily. Thought I somehow really screwed things up to have internet flat out not working. :D

Guest71022 a day ago

I updated my Starlink app, dish downloaded an update (while still ‘offline’), clicked install now via app, installed, rebooted, and now online. Take that Putin!

sneak a day ago

What’s crazy to me is how fast Starlink went from not being possible to being possible to existing to being critical infrastructure for so many people in so many places.

All because of reusable rockets and cheap(er) access to orbit.

ta1243 a day ago

My global roaming unit in Afghanistan dropped off at 1914 GMT

ReptileMan a day ago

Wonder what will be the cost in lives in Ukraine. Communications outage could create a disorder in the worst possible time.

  • imoverclocked a day ago

    Russian aerial assets also use Starlink so it could similarly save lives.

    • edganiukov a day ago

      Not as much as Ukrainians. The whole frontline is powered by Starlinks.

    • ReptileMan a day ago

      How do they bypass the sanctions?

birdman1979 a day ago

Another lawsuit, first Colbert, now our Internet

benzible a day ago

Glad that Musk torched his relationship with Trump so that the FAA / Starling contract is no longer on the table.

neverrroot a day ago

Recently, I’ve noticed that nothing hits the top spot as quickly as anything negative about Elon.

  • sidibe a day ago

    Maybe very briefly before it get flagged

    • tomhow 11 hours ago

      Both are in fact true. Any highly controversial topic elicits strong emotions on both sides (as well as those who are just bored of the topic and want it to go away), and thus rapidly attracts many upvotes but also many flags.

RIMR a day ago

[flagged]

  • NitpickLawyer a day ago

    > From what I understand, they are just one zero-day away from

    3 years vs. a "near peer" level state actor, and it is still standing (well, not now, but you get the point) would beg to differ. In stark contrast to Viasat, which had their terminals bricked at the start of the conflict...

  • nsxwolf a day ago

    What's the failure mode that would lead to an unrecoverable loss of such a large mesh network?

    • riscy a day ago

      Any failure that causes a loss of control or communication with the satellites, especially as a result of attack or software update rolled out to many of them that contains a latent bug.

    • markasoftware a day ago

      if you could somehow put something into persistent storage on the satellites that causes it to crash every time it tries to start up before it gets to the point where it's able to update the software, then they'd be bricked.

      see also: https://arstechnica.com/cars/2022/02/radio-station-snafu-in-...

      • 0xffff2 a day ago

        I don't know how Starlink's satellites are architected, but the spacecraft I am familiar with has several different boot images with automatic failover. For that system, you would have to replace/corrupt multiple of the actual boot images to brick the system completely.

        • markasoftware a day ago

          what if the boot image itself isn't corrupted but rather there's other persistent data which causes the firmware to get stuck / bootloop?

          This is more or less what happened to the Mazda head unit firmware in the link I posted.

          • 0xffff2 a day ago

            There are failsafe images that are fully self contained. I would hope that even Starlink satellites are engineered to a higher standard than an automotive head unit.

        • AdamJacobMuller a day ago

          There also must be some seriously robust out-of-band systems in place here.

  • boringg a day ago

    Sounds like you might need to dial back your hyperbole a touch. Seems a tad much on the exaggeration side of things.

2OEH8eoCRo0 a day ago

[flagged]

  • indigodaddy a day ago

    Except it's not. It's a historically consistent and reliable service that has been revolutionary for millions of people who otherwise would not have internet

kokorikooo a day ago

[flagged]

  • boringg a day ago

    Thoughtful take.

  • eYrKEC2 a day ago

    Yes. Just like Twitter is having fail whales all the time after his massive headcount cut.

    • kokorikooo a day ago

      There is no headcount cut here but everything is looking bad for Elon. Tesla stock is down too

      • bena a day ago

        Today, sure, but I've heard this a lot. Starting when it was around $100. It's currently just above $300.

        It's a lot like bitcoin/crypto-in-general in that aspect. It's constantly in danger of collapsing, but line keeps going up on average.

        It's why I can't bring myself to touch either of those things. They kind of defy common sense.

      • rvz a day ago

        > Tesla stock is down too

        Hope it sinks further. Time to buy.

        • ben_w a day ago

          > Time to buy.

          Not even shifting the decimal point left one place would be enough to make the price sensible.

system2 a day ago

Starlink.com is also experiencing an outage. Tesla.com works, so it makes me believe they are on different servers.

EDIT: Weird to get downvoted for a random observation. Are you guys full gray beard serious hackers?

ColoradoJoe a day ago

I'm in Colorado. Starlink has worked flawlessly since I installed it 2 years ago. This is ominous.

  • esseph a day ago

    One outage is not ominous.

MKais a day ago

(Not necessarily related, but interesting nonetheless)

Russian Nuclear Sabotage In Space Could Blast U.S., SpaceX Satellites

https://www.forbes.com/sites/kevinholdenplatt/2025/07/23/rus...

  • nartho a day ago

    Looks like UK mobile networks might be having global issues as well, very strange timing.

  • meepmorp a day ago

    Well it's an hour later and nobody got vaporized in response, so it probably wasn't Russian space nukes.

draconicdev a day ago

Everyone on this thread is so smart. I don’t have anything to add except a funny story.

My Starlink went out right when I was scheduled to join a meeting today at 2:15 CST.