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Based on incidents such as those reported in https://www.ft.com/content/24b8b7b2-9272-11e9-aea1-2b1d33ac3271, there is interest in spotting the occurrence and impact of large Internet outages such as may be occasioned by civil unrest etc. To spot the shutdown of a country automatically would take a bit of mining. For example, the country should have 2 or more target hosts and if all the targets in a country go offline (not reachable) in the same time frame then that is an indicator that something is probably happening and worth investigating. Of course, that assumes the Measurement Agent (SLAC) also was not down (due to maintenance etc.) at the same time. One can tell from say https://www-iepm.slac.stanford.edu/pinger/sites-per-country.html how many targets there are by country.

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According to https://twitter.com/InternetIntel following a coup attempt June 22nd the Internet in Ethiopia was largely unavailable for multiple days. This is shown below. Also shown are the outages are probbaly due to "Ethiopia traffic drops again (6pm UTC, 9pm ET time). While this may be proximately linked to grade 10 national exams, the use of exam leakage for political sabotage has mainly been the main threat."June 11 - 14,  June 2019. These correspond with the government shutting down the Internet (almost completely) to coincide with the country’s national exams.

Below is shown the daily packet loss (a dot means no pings were responded to) measured by sending up to 30 packets every 30 minutes.

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