After Twitter, WhatsApp service suffers brief global outage
San Francisco: Facebook-owned smartphone messaging service WhatsApp temporarily crashed in an array of countries from the US to India; potentially affecting hundreds of millions of users.
Reports of people having trouble with WhatsApp in countries including Japan, India, Malaysia, Colombia and the United States hit the Internet about 0200 GMT (7.30 am) on Tuesday.
Several users all around the world took to social media early morning on Tuesday to express their disregard at the app’s unexpected outage.
So WhatsApp is down again... pic.twitter.com/NnpCFwWmVd
— Chetan (@SlickScribe) January 26, 2016
whatsappdown .. *no tick marks.. restarts phone..still no tick marks .checks twitter *.. and boom! Twitter knows all. WhatsApp down today ��
— Ø¹Ø§Ø¦Ø´Û (@aichaansary) January 26, 2016
Restarted my phone and hit my wifi modem a couple times but at the end of the day, whatsapp is actually the one to blame. #whatsappdown
— â € (@chloelisann) January 26, 2016
The outage appeared to be resolved in most locations in an hour or so, according to Downdetector.com, which calls itself "the weatherman for the digital world."
Comments posted by users indicated they were having intermittent difficulties with WhatsApp during the problem period. Facebook did not respond to an AFP request for comment.
The disruption came on the heels of media reports that Facebook is working behind the scenes to integrate WhatsApp more snugly into the world's leading social network by providing the ability to share information between the services.
California-based Facebook bought WhatsApp for $19 billion in late 2014 and the messaging service has grown to nearly a billion users.