Problem found – and Microsoft working to fix it Microsoft Teams, used by more than 280 million people globally, forms an integral part of daily operations for businesses and schools, which use the service to make calls, schedule meetings and organize their workflow.Īmong the other services affected were Microsoft Exchange Online, SharePoint Online, OneDrive for Business, according to the company’s status page. Many users took to Twitter to share updates about the service disruption, with #MicrosoftTeams trending as a hashtag on the social media site. Microsoft‘s cloud unit Azure also tweeted about the networking issue, and said that a subset of users were experiencing problems with the platform.ĭuring the outage, most users were unable to exchange messages, join calls or use any features of Teams application. “We’ve identified a potential networking issue and are reviewing telemetry to determine the next troubleshooting steps,” Microsoft said in a tweet. The Downdetector site tracks outages by collating status reports from sources including user-submitted errors on its platform. Outage reports also spiked in Australia, Britain and the United Arab Emirates. Microsoft did not disclose the number of users affected by the disruption, but data from outage tracking website Downdetector showed more than 3,900 incidents in India and over 900 in Japan. Microsoft Corp said on Wednesday it was investigating a networking issue that impacted multiple services including Teams and Outlook, with outage reports saying the platforms were down for thousands of users globally. Here’s the latest on where we are, via Reuters: Outage ongoing as Microsoft rushes to fix it ![]() You can get to that server status page here. But there’s no news: it is still saying that it thinks it has found the problem but is looking for a way to fix it without causing new ones. Microsoft has updated its server status page to make the update a little more clean. Microsoft posts new update – but no new news You too might find that affected services are starting to work. Some of the customers who had previously reported impact are also reporting recovery.” We’ve rolled back the change and monitoring the service as it recovers. “We’ve identified that a wide-area networking (WAN) routing change caused impact to the service. Problem might be fixed, Microsoft saysĪn update to Microsoft’s server status page suggests – very tentatively – that the problem might be gradually getting fixed. And, anecdotally, that appears to be true: there’s a lot fewer complaints on Twitter, and tracking website Down Detector shows a greatly reduced number of reports. Microsoft’s status page indicates that service should be back to normal. Microsoft recognised some of the issues on its social networks and server status page, and indicated that it was searching for the cause of the problem.įollow our latest coverage of the issues here. The issues also appeared to affect Microsoft Azure, its cloud services platform, meaning that other websites could also be affected. Many of the company’s online services broke at once. Microsoft has been hit a major outage, taking down Outlook, Teams and more.
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