logo
EXCLUSIVE: Cybersmart founder owns the internet outage

EXCLUSIVE: Cybersmart founder owns the internet outage

Daily Maverick15-05-2025
'This lesson could help the industry,' Cybersmart cofounder and CTO Laurie Fialkov told Daily Maverick in a candid interview as the national outage dust settles.
The criticism for the outage that brought Cybersmart customers to a digital standstill earlier this week, came swiftly. And so did an apology – and then, unusually, an unvarnished account of what really went wrong.
Cybersmart reached out to Daily Maverick to let founder and CTO Laurie Fialkov pull back the curtain on 39 sleepless hours that nearly broke the network, the business, and a few engineers along the way. (Spoiler: it was not a cable break.)
'We did screw up,' he admitted. 'That kind of outage is long in this industry.'
The Cape Town-based ISP and fibre network operator experienced a near-total service disruption starting around midday on Monday, 12 May. What followed was a cascade of misdiagnoses, desperate rewiring, and a rude awakening to the dangers of old hardware lurking in even the most redundant systems.
From café to carrier
Fialkov's internet journey began in a Sea Point internet café called Inthenet in 1996. Back then, a 33.6kbps modem counted as high-speed.
Cybersmart, as the business became known in 1998, grew slowly and steadily. It's now a national network operator with thousands of businesses and residential customers, a fleet of fibre infrastructure and what was – until this week – a 22-year record of uninterrupted uptime.
'We spend so much time trying to be the ISP that never goes down,' Fialkov said. 'We've got everything. Multiple cable systems, battery redundancy, ringed networks… and we just never had an outage.'
But this week, everything went down – silently.
Phantom signals
It started quietly. Customers called Fialkov directly – just a few at first. Network monitoring showed all systems green. 'I can reach the whole network. It's impossible that we are down,' he recalled thinking. 'But then you get 15 calls in five minutes, and it's got to be an issue.'
Outside-looking diagnostics (via 'looking glasses' – remote tools that simulate connectivity from various points) revealed the horror: Cybersmart's Autonomous System Number, AS36874, had essentially vanished from parts of the global internet.
'Like this shell on the internet – completely isolated.'
A Denial-of-Service attack seemed a likely culprit. NexusGuard, Cybersmart's DDoS mitigation partner, was called in – only to say: Not a DOS.
Then, the real enemy emerged: old gear.
The ghost in the chassis
The culprit? Legacy Cisco 6500 routers – high-end switches that formed the spine of Cybersmart's original network.
'These things have been working for 15 years. End of life, yes. But working. We were meant to replace them. But… if it ain't broke, right?'
Until it broke. Hard.
One router in Johannesburg froze. Another in Cape Town followed.
'Too coincidental,' Fialkov said. Then more went dark. 'It was like a cancer – six machines, six different places, all failing.'
The root cause? A global routing table explosion. New peers (China Telecom, Hurricane Electric, Saudi Telecom) dumped an extra 150,000 routes into the internet's core. The old routers couldn't cope – they choked and silently failed.
With no support (Cisco dropped them years ago) and no viable fix, the team made a call: rip them all out.
Wait, what is a 'routing table explosion'?
At the core of the internet is a global 'routing table' – a constantly updated map showing how data travels between networks.
On Monday, three major networks (China Telecom, Hurricane Electric, and Saudi Telecom) suddenly added around 150,000 new routes to that map.
The result? A routing table 'explosion'.
Older routers – like these legacy Cisco 6500s still used in parts of Cybersmart's network – couldn't cope. These machines rely on specialised memory with strict limits. When overloaded, they didn't crash loudly; they just stopped forwarding traffic, silently dropping data.
These left parts of the internet unreachable, even though the hardware appeared 'green' and online.
It wasn't a cyberattack or a power cut. Just old infrastructure overwhelmed by a sudden global change – and management not retiring it soon enough.
The first cut, and the deepest
That decision triggered a national network reconfiguration. More than 180 switches and 65 PPE servers had to be re-patched, reconfigured and brought back online.
Fialkov described the operation as 'cutting out the cancer'.
The operation took 39 hours and 16 minutes – a truly Herculean effort.
'There are some guys who haven't slept for 40 hours now. They really showed up for us,' he said.
By Wednesday morning, most services were restored. But not without a cost – to Cybersmart's reputation and its customers' businesses.
Lessons in humility
'This has been a life lesson,' Fialkov said. 'You get too arrogant. Twenty-two years without an outage, and you start to believe your own myth.'
He admitted that the company had been sitting on a known problem: ageing infrastructure, flagged for replacement years ago.
'We'd been looking at the same thing for four years. Working perfectly. Until it didn't. Took us out at the knees.'
Still, he insists the issue wasn't a lack of contingency. 'We've got spares. We've got redundancy. This was human complacency. We left something broken in the network for too long.'
Heartfelt apology to the 'R399'
Interestingly, he says the customers hardest hit weren't the big corporates – it was the small businesses.
'The R399 customer? That's the guy who might be running his whole business off one link,' Fialkov said. 'An outage like this could be the end of him.'
He told Daily Maverick how he spent 11 hours on a support call with one such customer, trying to assure them their business would survive.
That sobering reality drove home what Cybersmart had become. 'Ten years ago, no one would've noticed if we went down. Now? The whole country feels it.'
Where to now?
There are still issues being resolved, and some customers are wrongly blaming Cybersmart for unrelated faults. But for the most part, the network is back.
Fialkov's candour in this moment of failure is unusual in South Africa's telecoms industry – and maybe even refreshing.
'You owe your customers a service,' he said. 'And if you can't deliver it, you must be called out on that.'
And then, just like that, the fibre was (mostly) back – but the scar remains. DM
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

South African intellectuals propose new strategies for economic empowerment
South African intellectuals propose new strategies for economic empowerment

IOL News

time21 hours ago

  • IOL News

South African intellectuals propose new strategies for economic empowerment

Christo Van der Rheede hosted the FW De Klerk Foundation conference. Image: File A recent conference hosted by the FW de Klerk Foundation in collaboration with the Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung brought together prominent South African intellectuals to discuss alternative ways to empower South Africans and stimulate economic growth. The Constitutional Rights conference, titled "Achieving an Inclusive Economy", featured panellists including Moeletsi Mbeki, Ashor Sarupen, Dr Celeste Campher, Ismail Joosub, and Professor William Gumede. One of the key topics discussed at the conference, hosted by its Executive Director Christo van der Rheede, was the need to rethink the current Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment (BEE) policy. Mbeki, a prominent economist and businessman, argued that BEE has failed to achieve its intended goals and has instead created a culture of dependency among black professionals. Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Advertisement Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Next Stay Close ✕ "We have to repeal Black Economic Empowerment legislation," Mbeki said. "One of the most important consequences of the BEE combined with public sector salaries is that it disincentivises, especially young black professionals, to become entrepreneurs. It incentivises them to become public sector employees, and this is why South Africa is not building new companies." Gumede, a leading expert on economic development, proposed alternative empowerment strategies that focus on pragmatism and inclusivity. Gumede argued that the current BEE policy has benefited only a small elite group of black individuals, while leaving the majority of South Africans behind. "We need to shift to alternative optics of empowerment," he said. "The way empowerment is structured now is based on giving politically connected ANC leaders and trade union leaders benefits in existing companies. We need to bring small companies into supply chains and manufacturing so that the supply chains are in manufacturing. Secondly, we need to reward skills training and reward employment so that empowerment becomes that if you employ young people.' Gumede said pragmatism was a philosophy that must be implemented in South Africa. 'From South Africa's point of view, we need to focus all our state, economic, and nation-building initiatives on pragmatism… We need to look at what works and what is in the interest of everyone. We need to remove anti-growth policies,' he said. The conference also discussed the need to reduce the public sector wage bill, which is seen as unsustainable and detrimental to economic growth. Campher, an economist and policy analyst, argued that the government should prioritise infrastructure development and job creation over social interventions. "The current public sector wage bill must be reduced drastically to afford the building of public infrastructure," Campher said. "Our roads, harbours, and railway system are in a dilapidated state and must be fixed." Sarupen, a businessman and entrepreneur, proposed a Basic Employment Grant scheme that would provide individuals with a grant in exchange for rendering basic services at the municipal level. Sarupen argued that this approach would not only provide a safety net for the poor but also promote entrepreneurship and skills development. "A Basic Employment Grant should also be integrated with a skills and entrepreneurial development programme," Sarupen said. "Continuing to hand out grants for free perpetuates and has entrenched a dependency culture." One of the attendees of the conference, which was held in Boksburg, Ekurhuleni, said that it highlighted the need for alternative empowerment strategies that prioritise inclusivity, pragmatism, and entrepreneurship. "If we rethink the current BEE policy and promote small businesses and job creation, South Africa can stimulate economic growth and reduce poverty and inequality," he said.

Subaru unveils new front-wheel-drive Toyota-based Uncharted EV
Subaru unveils new front-wheel-drive Toyota-based Uncharted EV

The Citizen

timea day ago

  • The Citizen

Subaru unveils new front-wheel-drive Toyota-based Uncharted EV

Subaru has whipped the wraps off the Uncharted, a Toyota-based all-electric crossover, which will initially be available in front-wheel drive. The Subaru Uncharted shares its e-TNGA platform with the new Toyota CH-R+, but receives Subaru-specific styling and chassis tuning to set it apart from the crossover/SUV it is based on. Significantly, the Uncharted debuts as Subaru's only front-wheel-drive model, with all-wheel-drive variants set to be introduced at a later stage. The FWD-equipped Premium model features a single electric motor that generates 164kW. The AWD GT and Sport variants will produce 544kW from a dual electric-motor setup. Subaru claims the more powerful variants are capable of completing the 0-100km/h sprint in less than five seconds. All trims utilise a 74.7kWh battery pack, which supports 150kW DC fast charging. Plugged into the latter facility, Subaru says the battery is capable of recharging from 10% to 80% in 30 minutes. An 11kW AC onboard charger that can be used to charge at home is also present. The single- and twin electric-motor models offer 480km and 466km of all-electric operating range, respectively, the company says. Inside, the Uncharted plays host to a 14-inch, touch-enabled infotainment screen with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto screen mirroring, dual wireless smartphone chargers, and dedicated USB-C ports for rear passengers. Standard safety features include the firm's EyeSight driver assistance technology, adaptive cruise control, collision avoidance alert, and a driver-monitoring system. Sport and GT trims receive X‑Mode, a panoramic sunroof, a heated steering wheel, a surround-view camera array, and distinct upholstery options. Click here to browse thousands of new and used vehicles here with CARmag! Related The post Subaru Unveils New (Front-Wheel-Drive) Toyota-Based Uncharted EV appeared first on CAR Magazine. Breaking news at your fingertips… Follow Caxton Network News on Facebook and join our WhatsApp channel. Nuus wat saakmaak. Volg Caxton Netwerk-nuus op Facebook en sluit aan by ons WhatsApp-kanaal.

FEDUSA condemns lenient sentencing of businessman involved in R66 million fraud
FEDUSA condemns lenient sentencing of businessman involved in R66 million fraud

IOL News

timea day ago

  • IOL News

FEDUSA condemns lenient sentencing of businessman involved in R66 million fraud

A Gauteng businessman has been jailed for an effective five years in connection with R66million Transnet fraud. Image: File The Federation of Unions of South Africa (Fedusa) has welcomed the recent yet lenient sentencing of Gauteng-based businessman, Yakub Ahmed Suleman Bhikhu. Bhikhu was found guilty on 81 counts of fraud, forgery, uttering, money laundering, and the Contravention of the Tax Administration Act in the Pretoria Regional Court. According to the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) Investigating Directorate Against Corruption (IDAC) spokesperson, Henry Mamothame, Bhikhu pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 10 years' direct imprisonment, of which five years were suspended for five years. IOL reported that the convicted businessman was further ordered to reimburse R300,000 to Transnet, which he received as gratification. In addition, his company was sentenced to a fine of R500,000, which was suspended on the condition that no similar offence is committed. The union, on Wednesday, said despite the light sentence imposed on the businessman, it fully supports and endorses the position taken by its affiliate, the United National Transport Union (Untu). "Like Untu, Fedusa is deeply concerned that the effective five-year sentence, following a conviction in one of South Africa's most egregious State Capture-related scandals, does not reflect the gravity of the crime nor the long-term damage inflicted on workers, the economy, and the integrity of public institutions," said Fedusa. The union added that Bhikhu's conviction for his involvement in facilitating corruption through his company, Homix (Pty) Ltd, at Transnet is a sobering reminder of the vast network of enablers, insiders, and private beneficiaries who exploited the parastatal for personal gain. This is in spite of the union's reservation about the severity of the sentence. "Fedusa believes the sentence handed down fails to deliver justice to the thousands of workers who continue to endure the consequences of this corruption, including job losses, infrastructure collapse, stagnant wages, and declining service delivery. This leniency sends the wrong message. It emboldens those who loot the state to believe they can walk away with light penalties while the public pays the price," the union stated. With South Africans bear the brunt of corruption in the private and public sectors as well as other sections of society, Fedusa believes a stronger sentence would have sent a better message to other corrupt businesspeople. "The sentence undermines confidence in our democratic institutions, particularly the National Prosecuting Authority and the judiciary, whose mandate is to protect the public interest and ensure accountability at all levels of society," it said. According to IOL, Bhikhu was last week jailed for an effective five years in connection with R66 million Transnet fraud, after he and his company, Homix (Pty) Ltd, were convicted on 81 counts that include fraud, forgery, uttering, money laundering, and the Contravention of the Tax Administration Act in the Pretoria Regional Court. [email protected]

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store