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How Did An Australian Warship Block The Internet Across New Zealand Overnight?
How Did An Australian Warship Block The Internet Across New Zealand Overnight?

News18

time2 days ago

  • News18

How Did An Australian Warship Block The Internet Across New Zealand Overnight?

Last Updated: Technology experts said the disruption started around 2 am, affecting internet connectivity and causing many small radio stations across New Zealand to go off air Wi-Fi and radio signals suddenly stopped working in many parts of New Zealand's North and South Islands on Wednesday morning, confusing residents since no technical faults or storms were reported. The disruption was later linked to the Australian warship HMAS Canberra, which was quietly moving towards Wellington. HMAS Canberra, one of the largest ships in the Royal Australian Navy, created significant interference with internet and radio signals from Taranaki to Marlborough due to its navigation radar operating on the same frequency as New Zealand's Wi-Fi and FM stations. Technology experts explained that the disruption began around 2 am, affecting internet connectivity and causing many small radio stations to shut down. Internet service providers had to disable their networks, and stations like Brian FM had to switch to backup systems. Matthew Harrison, managing director of New Zealand internet company Primo, said, 'This was not a normal technical glitch…this was the full power of military-grade radar." The Australian Defence Force (ADF) issued a statement acknowledging the interference and confirming that they immediately changed their radar frequency upon realising the issue, which restored normal service without prolonged interruption. Dan O'Grady, an officer from New Zealand's Radio Spectrum Department, noted that the affected frequency band is a shared spectrum used by the public for Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. First Published: June 06, 2025, 19:06 IST

Australian navy ship accidentally blocks wifi across parts of New Zealand
Australian navy ship accidentally blocks wifi across parts of New Zealand

The Guardian

time2 days ago

  • The Guardian

Australian navy ship accidentally blocks wifi across parts of New Zealand

The Australian Defence Force (ADF) has conceded that one of its ships inadvertently blocked wireless internet and radio services across swathes of New Zealand's North and South islands this week. The incident occurred on Wednesday morning as HMAS Canberra, one of the largest ships in the Royal Australian Navy, was on its way to Wellington, where it ultimately arrived on Thursday. As HMAS Canberra was passing along New Zealand's coast on its approach to Wellington, its navigation radar interfered with wireless and radio signals over a large area spanning Taranaki in the North Island to the Marlborough region on the South Island. It's understood that when the radar was heard on the frequency used by many internet providers and radio stations, those commercial operators had to stop using the channel. One local tech boss claimed disruptions began shortly after 2am local time. The New Zealand Defence Force said it contacted its Australian counterpart after the issue was reported. 'HMAS Canberra became aware that their navigation radar was interfering with Wi-Fi in the Taranaki to the Marlborough region on approach to Wellington,' an ADF spokesperson said. 'On becoming aware, HMAS Canberra changed frequencies rectifying the interference. There are no ongoing disruptions,' they said. The New Zealand Defence Force said it now considered the incident resolved. BrianFM, a radio station based in the South Island town of Blenheim and which broadcasts across the island, said it had to switch to a backup system to continue to broadcast. 'We like to be, you know, pretty reliable and robust, and it certainly took us out and numerous others,' the station's founder Andrew Jeffries told Matthew Harrison, managing director of NZ wireless internet and mobile telecommunications company Primo, said 'it's not every day a warship takes your gear offline'. 'This wasn't just a blip,' Harrison wrote in a post on LinkedIn. 'It was full-scale, military-grade radar triggering built-in safety protocols designed to protect airspace.' 'It rolled across our network in sync with the ship's movement. We've never seen anything like it here before!' he said. Harrison then joked: 'Hey Royal Australian Navy… where can we send the bill?'

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