Besides the usual safety issues for construction, generally covered under OSHA rules (OSHA 10 and 30), fiber optics adds concerns for eye safety, chemicals, sparks from fusion splicing, disposal of fiber shards and more. An Optical Distribution Frame (ODF) is the central hub for fiber splicing, termination, patching, and cable protection in modern optical networks. As data centers, enterprises, telecom operators, and smart-building infrastructures deploy increasingly dense fiber links, ODFs provide the structured. The aim of this paper is to analyze the previously presented security risks and, based on measurements, provide the risk level evaluation. The major risk is the possibility of inserting a splitter into the optical distribution network and capturing a portion of the entire spectrum, i., all. Fiber-optic cables are the backbone of modern connectivity—powering 5G networks, global internet backbones, and data center interconnections with near-light-speed data transmission. While these cables are engineered for durability (with some rated to last 25+ years), they are not invulnerable. Without proper care, handling optical fibers can result in physical injuries from shards, or optical damage from laser light exposure.