/ 27 January 2015

Hack denied after Facebook, Instagram interruption

Facebook and Instagram's outage was not the work of hacking group Lizard Squad
Facebook and Instagram's outage was not the work of hacking group Lizard Squad

Facebook, the world’s most popular social network, and its Instagram photo site were interrupted temporarily on Tuesday, provoking panic, rumours of a hack, and jokes of how more than one billion users were struggling to cope.

“This was not the result of a third party attack,” Facebook said in a statement after its services were restored.

The outage “occurred after we introduced a change that affected our configuration systems,” it added.

The breakdown, at around 6.15am GMT, reportedly lasted an hour and hit users in the United States, Europe and Asia, with both sites showing error messages. The outage also affected South Africa.

With users disabled from posting selfies or the latest details of their personal lives, many rushed to Twitter to complain and joke, with “#facebookdown” and “#SocialMeltdown2015” rapidly trending.

Some joked about how they had been able to read real books during the enforced social media pause.

Put down the selfie stick
“Status Update: Facebook is Down!!!” Twitter user @kingpodge posted, in a photographed handwritten note.

“It’s, like, really snowing in New York and now Facebook and Instagram are down. The hipster apocalypse has begun,” tweeted another user, @jessbrammar, as a snowstorm swept across the east coast of the United States.

“Things to do during #SocialMeldown2015 1. Take a selfie 2. Melt down further because we can’t instagram it,” posted @YashiDP.

“#facebookdown and I hope it never gets up again! Imagine the lives that would be saved!” tweeted @nikonical.

Hack denied
Some suggested that hacking group Lizard Squad had been responsible for the outage, after a tweet on the group’s Twitter account read: “Facebook, Instagram, Tinder, AIM, Hipchat #offline #LizardSquad.”

Reports said that Tinder, AIM, Hipchat and Myspace had also been affected.

Lizard Squad has claimed to be behind a series of hacks of Microsoft and Sony gaming networks over Christmas.

The group also claimed an attack on the website of Malaysia Airlines on Monday, referencing the Islamic State jihadists and threatening to expose data taken from the carrier’s servers.

Facebook, which is headquartered in California, has more than 1.35 billion active users each month.

More than 80% of its daily active users are outside the United States and Canada.

Though much of its traffic is driven by seemingly banal or inconsequential posts, it is a vital tool for countless businesses and organisations and a key forum for communication in countries with repressive governments.

The last time Facebook was down was last September. – AFP