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Huh. It's The Register, which is a British piece of media, with a London-based author writing about an event in the UK and they're using the traditionally-American English spelling. Maybe the UK is going towards "fiber" rather than "fibre".
hits Google N-grams
Ah hah. Yup, apparently it's at about 50-50, but the majority in British English just switched to "fiber" within the last ten years.
https://books.google.com/ngrams/graph?content=fiber%2Cfibre&year_start=1800&year_end=2019&corpus=en-GB-2019&smoothing=3
There’s a few things going on here, in addition to a general Americanisation.
Firstly El Reg obviously wants to attract those sweet sweet American clicks, so they could well have American English as their style guide (I’m a bit doubtful, I bet they use colour).
Secondly there’s long been a tendency to use American spelling in IT journalism for technical objects. So “optical fiber” but “dietary fibre”; “floppy disk”, but djs “spin discs”. “TV programme”, but “computer program”.
It’s been that ways since at least the 80s, quite possibly earlier.
Disk vs disc I believe is down to the type of medium, magnetic disk vs optical disc