Afghanistan In 2021
Taliban-governed
Afghanistan, "computer
kars" distribute Internet-derived content by hand: "Movies, music, mobile applications, iOS updates, and naughty videos. Also creating Apple IDs and social media accounts, and backing up and unlocking phones and recovering data." The
kars collectively maintain an archive of hundreds of terabytes of data. Four terabytes of the latest Indian or American movies or Turkish TV dramas, dubbed in the Afghan national languages Dari and Pashto reportedly wholesale for about 800 afghanis, or nine US dollars, while the retail price of five gigabytes of content is 100 afghanis, or one US dollar.
Kars report that their earnings have dropped 90% under Taliban rule.
Australia When
Australia joined
Usenet in 1983, it received articles via tapes sent from the United States to the
University of Sydney, which disseminated data to dozens of other computers on the country's Unix network.
Bhutan The Rigsum Sherig Collection project uses a sneakernet to distribute offline educational resources, including
Kiwix and
Khan Academy on a Stick, to hundreds of schools and other educational institutions in the Kingdom of
Bhutan. Many of the schools in Bhutan have computers or IT labs, but no Internet connection (or a very slow one). The sneakernet, facilitated by teachers, distributes about 25 GB of free, open-source educational software to the schools, often using external
hard disks.
Cuba El Paquete Semanal is a roughly 1TB compilation of media, distributed weekly throughout
Cuba via portable hard drives and USB memory sticks.
Iran A weekly data dump compilation collected through the satellite system
Toosheh.
North Korea North Korean dissidents have been known to smuggle flash drives filled with western movies and television shows.
Pakistan The
May 2011 raid of
Osama bin Laden's compound in Abbottabad,
Pakistan, revealed that he used a series of USB thumb drives to store his email drafts. A courier of his would then take the saved emails to a nearby Internet cafe and send them out to the desired recipients.
South Africa In September 2009, Durban company Unlimited IT reportedly pitted a
messenger pigeon against South African ISP
Telkom to transfer 4 GB of data from
Howick to
Durban. The pigeon, carrying the data on a
memory stick, arrived in one hour eight minutes, with the data taking another hour to read from the memory stick. During the same two-hour period, only about 4.2% of the data had been transferred over the
ADSL link. A similar experiment was conducted in England in September 2010; the
"pigeonnet" also proved superior. In November 2009 the Australian comedy/current-affairs television program
Hungry Beast repeated this experiment. The experiment had the team transfer a 700 MB file via three delivery methods to determine which was the fastest; A carrier pigeon with a
microSD card, a car carrying a
USB Stick, or a
Telstra ADSL line. The data was to be transferred a distance of by road. The pigeon won the race with a time of approximately 1 hour 5 minutes, the car came in second at 2 hours 10 minutes, while the internet transfer did not finish, having dropped out a second time and not come back. Wizzy Digital Courier provided Internet access to schools in South Africa with poor or no network connectivity by implementing
UUCP on USB memory sticks. This allowed offline cached email transport and scoops of web pages to back-fill a web cache.
United States Google has used a sneakernet to transport large datasets, including 120
TB of data from the
Hubble Space Telescope. Users of
Google Cloud can import their data into
Google Cloud Storage through sneakernet.
Oracle similarly offers its Data Transfer Service to customers to migrate data to
Oracle Cloud Infrastructure or export data from it. The
SETI@home project uses a sneakernet to overcome bandwidth limitations: data recorded by the
radio telescope in Arecibo, Puerto Rico was stored on magnetic tapes which were then shipped to
Berkeley, California, for processing. In 2005,
Jim Gray reported sending hard drives and even "metal boxes with processors" to transport large amounts of data by postal mail.
Very Long Baseline Interferometry performed using the
Very Long Baseline Array ships hard drives to a data reduction site in Socorro, New Mexico. They refer to their data transfer mechanism as "HDOA" (Hard Drives On Airplane). Data analytics teams in the financial services sector often use sneakernets to transfer sensitive corporate information and information obtained from
data mining, such as ledger entries, customer data and financial statistics. There are several reasons for this: firstly, sneakernets can generally provide very high security (and possibly more importantly, they are
perceived to be secure) due to the impossibility of a
man-in-the-middle attack or
packet sniffing; secondly, the volumes of data concerned are often extremely high; and thirdly, setting up secure network links between the client business and the analytics team's facilities is often either impossible or an extremely convoluted process. In 2015
Amazon Web Services launched AWS Snowball, a , 50 TB device for transporting data to the AWS cloud; and in 2016 AWS Snowmobile, a truck to transport up to 100 PB of data in one load. For similar reasons, there is also a Google Transfer Appliance, an IBM Cloud Mass Data Migration device, and Microsoft's Azure Data Box Disk service. Observation data from the
Event Horizon Telescope is collected on hard drives which are transported by commercial freight airplanes from the various telescopes to the
MIT Haystack Observatory and the
Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy, where the data is analyzed.
USSR In later
USSR, the operating system called
DEMOS was created and adapted for many types of Soviet computers by cloning versions of
UNIX that were brought into USSR on magnetic tapes bypassing the
Iron Curtain. This allowed to build
Relcom country-wide
UUCP network to provide global
Usenet access for Soviet users which led to the registration of
.su ("Soviet Union")
top level domain in 1990. ==In media==