Go back a couple of years and the posts then would make you assume a thread such as this wouldn't be seen, but FTTP seems to present new problems.
Numbers.
A couple of years ago there were perhaps in the high tens of thousands of active FTTP subscibers. There are now over a million on Openreach based FTTP alone and growing rapidly. So it stands to reason there will be more and more incidents publicised like this one.
Nothing is infallible or unbreakable, but overall the infrastructure used with FTTP is still relatively new and the nature and architecture of it makes it far in excess more stable and reliable than the copper network.