Facebook outage: What we know so far

Last night (October 4), millions of users across the world were not able to access Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp. This is what we know about the worldwide outage so far.

According to Down Detector, thousands of users reported that they could not use any of Facebook Inc’s services just after 17:00 on October 4. Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp users were left high and dry.

Chief technology officer Mike Schroepfer tweeted that the company was experiencing network issues that led to the outage.

Facebook’s services were done for almost six hours. This morning (October 5), Facebook released a statement with more details of what had happened.

“Our engineering teams have learned that configuration changes on the backbone routers that co-ordinate network traffic between our data centres caused issues that interrupted this communication. This disruption to network traffic had a cascading effect on the way our data centres communicate, bringing our services to a halt,” the statement reads.

What made this outage even more catastrophic was the fact that Facebook’s internal tools and systems, used by employees, were down too – making it more difficult for staff to resolve the issue.

As of this morning, all of Facebook’s services appeared to be functioning as normal.

The root cause of the outage appears to be a broken border gateway protocol (BGP) route update that was applied by engineering teams earlier in the day.

Simply put, this means that the servers that run the applications became unreachable when this update was applied.

Cloudflare vice president Dane Knecht took to Twitter to give an update on what was experienced.

For a more in-depth look into BGP, click here

“People and businesses around the world rely on us every day to stay connected. We understand the impact outages like these have on people’s lives, and our responsibility to keep people informed about disruptions to our services. We apologise to all those affected, and we’re working to understand more about what happened today so we can continue to make our infrastructure more resilient,” Facebook Inc’s statements reads.

Twitter upsurge

With the three popular social media apps down, many users flocked to Twitter to see what the problem was, thinking the cause was their own connection or WiFi. However, everyone was quick to learn that it was a global problem.

Facebook used Twitter to keep its users updated.

This shone the spotlight firmly on Twitter.

Billions of dollars lost

Facebook makes billions of dollars each year on ad revenue, and even a minute of outage can be catastrophic for the company.

As a result of the outage, it is estimated that around $6b (R90b) of Mark Zuckerberg’s personal wealth was lost.

Facebook Inc’s stock fell 4.9% yesterday, as a result of both the outage and damaging claims by a whistleblower. 

The whistleblower and the Facebook Files

Frances Haugen, a former Facebook employee, alleged in an interview the day before the outage (October 3) that the company is unable to properly deal with hate and misinformation on its platform – specifically in the lead up to the 2020 US elections.

Haugen has leaked internal documents, called ‘The Facebook Files’, which detail how the company focuses on growth and its own interests, rather than the public good. Facebook has denied these allegations.

Watch her interview here:

Today (October 5), Haugen is set to testify at a hearing convened by the Senate Commerce consumer protection panel.

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