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cross-region replication
About this tag
Discussions on WindowsForum.com about cross-region replication focus on how undersea cable cuts in the Red Sea forced Microsoft Azure to reroute traffic, causing increased latency and disruptions for cloud services across regions. The content highlights that physical infrastructure failures in a narrow maritime corridor can impact global cloud performance, requiring emergency traffic engineering and rerouting. While the tag itself refers to data replication across geographic regions, the forum threads specifically address real-world incidents where cable damage disrupted normal replication paths, leading to higher latency and degraded throughput for Azure customers. The recurring theme is the dependency of cloud platforms on undersea cables and the operational challenges of maintaining cross-region replication during such events.
A sudden cluster of undersea fiber cuts in the Red Sea has forced Microsoft Azure and other cloud and carrier operators to reroute traffic, producing measurable latency and slower internet performance across parts of South Asia, the Gulf and beyond—an event that exposes how a handful of damaged...
Microsoft confirmed that parts of its Azure cloud footprint experienced noticeable disruptions after multiple undersea fibre‑optic cables in the Red Sea were cut, forcing engineers to reroute traffic and apply emergency traffic‑engineering measures while carrier repairs were planned.
Background...
Microsoft confirmed on September 6 that multiple undersea fibre‑optic cables in the Red Sea were cut, and warned Azure customers that traffic which “previously traversed through the Middle East” may experience increased latency as packets are rerouted across longer, often congested alternatives...
cdn
cloud resilience
cross-regionreplication
edge caching
internet backbone
latency
microsoft azure
red sea
service health
subsea cables
traffic engineering
Microsoft has warned that users of its Azure cloud may see higher-than-normal latency and intermittent disruptions after multiple undersea fiber-optic cables in the Red Sea were cut, forcing traffic onto longer alternate routes while repair work and global rerouting continue. Background
The Red...