Microsoft partners with thousands of users, The company is investigating the outage
On Wednesday, Microsoft said it was investigating an outage that prevented users from accessing Microsoft Teams or taking advantage of any features on the app, but did not disclose details about how many users were affected. enjoy.
However, there were more than 4,800 incidents where people reported problems with Microsoft Team around 10pm ET / 7:30am IST, according to Downdetector.commonitor outages by collating status reports from sources including user-submitted errors on its platform.
The web monitoring company also shows more than 150 incidents of people reporting problems with Microsoft Office 365. Meanwhile, statistics on Downdetector.in disclosure that there are about 1,700 complaints about inaccessibility Microsoft Team from users in India at around 8:50am.
We’ve received reports of users not being able to access Microsoft Teams or take advantage of any features. We’re investigating the issue and further updates can be found in your Service Health Dashboard via TM402718.
– Microsoft 365 Status (@MSFT365Status) July 21, 2022
Other major tech companies have also been affected by outages over the past year, with outages of nearly six hours at Meta maintain WhatsApp, Instagramand Message out of reach of billions of users last October.
In the first day of this month, Twitter to be down for some users, according to user reports on Downdetector that tracks downtime. While the service appears to be operating normally in India, other parts of the world, including the US, appear to be affected by the outage.
At the time, Internet monitoring group Netblocks, which monitors attempts to intentionally block internet access, said Twitter was “having a major problem internationally” but it was “not related to filtering or disruption.” national internet.”
Famous for its outage in its early years, Twitter used the famous illustration “Failed Whale”, a bird being lifted by birds, for such incidents until in 2013, when it stopped using the logo.
© Thomson Reuters 2022