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Friday, 24 January 2014

Gmail And Google+ Go Down On Friday, Impacting Millions Of Users Across the World

Post By Kelly Clay:

On Friday just before 11 a.m. PST, Google's GOOG -3.1% Gmail went down, leaving millions of users – including business users relying on Google Apps for Business – unable to communicate. The downtime was confirmed with Down Right Now and Google’s App Status Dashboard, which showed that the service is experiencing a service disruption at this time – and that Gmail also burped earlier Friday morning. Google’s official blog for Gmail also returned a 503 error. Gmail’s error  is a 500 code problem, indicating it’s only a temporary problem – but doesn’t explain the cause. Judging by the amount of tweets and FB updates about the problem, it’s likely affecting the majority of users worldwide.
Google+ is also down, affecting YouTube comments which means that users can’t comment and existing comments aren’t loading. Additionally, Hangouts aren’t working on both the web and mobile,which have emerged as a primary method of communication for remote teams. The downtime of Google+ just further impacts businesses around the world.
In Seattle, Sean Sperte tweeted “This means we can all take the day off, right? #GmailDown“. In Canada, Kirstine Stewart (Head of @TwitterCanada) tweeted “Gmail Down = Adult Snow Day”. Others – like Kat Daemon from New York – clearly couldn’t handle the downtime, as she tweeted “Is Gmail down??? I can’t get in and the anxiety is starting to gnaw at my face.” Even Yahoo YHOO -3.76% (which offers its own email service) tweeted that Gmail was down. As more users around the world tweeted about the downtime Gmail actually became a trending topic on Twitter, indicating the sheer magnitude of the crash.
The last time Gmail went down was September 24, 2013. At that time, Google said the issue affected less than 50 percent of Gmail users, which means almost half of all Gmail users suffered some kind of glitch. Today’s downtown was perhaps one of it’s most serious, though – all of Google crashed on August 19, 2013 - including YouTube, Gmail and the company’s search engine — but only between one to five minutes around 4:30 PDT.
(This article was originally published in Forbes Magazine, you can access it here.

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