TECHNOLOGY

Facebook is down, along with Instagram, WhatsApp and Messenger

Published

on

If you can’t access Facebook, Instagram, Messenger or WhatsApp, you’re not the only one. Starting at approximately 11:38AM ET, Downdetector began logging a spike in outage reports across all four Facebook-owned services. Andy Stone, a spokesperson for the company, said at 12:07PM ET that the company was working to resolve the issue quickly. The error page you see when trying to connect to the platforms suggests a Domain Name System (DNS) error is responsible for the outage.

If you can’t access Facebook, Instagram, Messenger or WhatsApp, you’re not the only one. Starting at approximately 11:38AM ET, Downdetector began logging a spike in outage reports across all four Facebook-owned services. Andy Stone, a spokesperson for the company, said at 12:07PM ET that the company was working to resolve the issue quickly. The error page you see when trying to connect to the platforms suggests a Domain Name System (DNS) error is responsible for the outage.

It’s not clear how widespread the issue is, but Downdetector shows more than 30,000 outage reports for Facebook alone, with another 20,000 tied to Instagram. Per a tweet from the official Oculus Twitter account, the problem is also affecting the Oculus App, Store and website.

It may take some time for Facebook to resolve the issue. According to The New York Times, the outage has also taken out Workplace, the company’s internal communications platform. Additionally, employees reportedly can’t receive external emails at the moment. We’ve reached out to Facebook for more information.

Per journalist Brian Krebs, Facebook’s DNS records were withdrawn from the global routing tables sometime this morning.”We don’t know why this change was made,” Krebs wrote in a tweet. “It could well have been the result of an internal, system-wide change or update that went awry. It’s all speculation at this point why. Facebook alone is in control over its DNS records.”

Think your friends would be interested? Share this story!

Trending

Copyright © The San Francisco Telegraph, Since 1851