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Madsory told Ars that the AS routed to China Telecom

Madsory told Ars that the AS routed to China Telecom only diverted traffic to and from China Telecom for short periods in December 2015 and that the routing didn't alter after that.

In late February, Verizon reported that Verizon Asia-Pacific had intercepted about 20 percent of all Internet traffic through China Telecom. The company's own data generated by AS3134 was only a small fraction of the rest of the internet.

This is a big problem for the Internet. It is also a big problem for the US government, which is currently in the middle of an ongoing lawsuit over its handling of the Internet. The government has been waging an ongoing legal battle to force Verizon out of the U.S., and as a result, the US has been left with a long list of companies and services to be affected by the legal battle. The Federal Communications Commission has yet to decide on what the FCC may decide on.

But because the US government is so closely involved with the litigation, the Obama administration has been willing to use these lawsuits to put pressure on Verizon. In November, the Obama administration issued a directive to Verizon in a blog post called "Why Verizon Should Be Removed from the Internet: We Need to Stop It." This is a huge victory, for the government and for Verizon, because Verizon is a very powerful US company, and it has a lot of influence over the U.S. government.

This is not the first time that Verizon has been caught doing this. One of the US government's top priority in the Internet case is the American Civil Liberties Union. As a result, the US government is trying to convince the telecom industry that Verizon is a victim of the law. It has asked the government to block the use of Verizon's AS3134-controlled routing as a method of routing large amounts of traffic. And the government is going to have a hard time convincing Verizon to comply if it can't prove that Verizon isn't a victim.

In December, Verizon argued that it was taking a "step backward" in its investigation into the AS3134 routing. Verizon is arguing that it's taking an "adverse regulatory approach" and it's ignoring the legal threat of the AS3134 routing and that its own data sent to China by AS3134 shouldn't be in danger. The FCC has been a little wary of the AS3134 routing in the past, even when Verizon was doing a good job of protecting customers from data interception. The FCC's decision to let Verizon off the hook has caused a big change for the federal

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