Search This Blog

Powered by Blogger.

Blog Archive

Labels

Showing posts with label Power Outage. Show all posts

Digital Landline Switch Halted for Vulnerable Users in UK


UK- based phone companies have halted vulnerable customers from switching to digital landlines following “serious incidents” where telecare devices stopped working. These devices, which can be used to call for assistance in an emergency, are estimated to be utilized by about two million individuals.

There are situations where digital landlines can malfunction, like a power outage. According to a charter that phone carriers have ratified, customers may only switch from analog to digital lines if doing so has no effect on telecare. 

The UK is currently transitioning to digital landlines, a process that primarily entails replacing equipment at exchanges rather than in individual homes. Although information on the switchover has been made public by telecom firms and Ofcom, the industry watchdog, some people who rely on their analog landline are concerned. 

After taking notice of the incidents where the telecare devises failed, Technology Secretary Michelle Donelan contacted telecom firms, including Sky, BT, Virgin Media O2 and TalkTalk.

The companies have come to an agreement on a new charter, whereby they promise not to move clients to a digital network until they are certain that they will be safe. Donelan stated that phone companies "agreed that the right thing to do is to temporarily pause all non-voluntary, managed migrations to a digital landline where there is any risk that a customer's telecare service will not continue to work."

The phone companies also committed to:

  • Additional checks on consumers who have already been transferred to ensure they do not have telecare equipment the phone provider was not aware of.
  • Not transfer consumers to a digital landline without assurance that a compatible telecare solution is in place.

Donelan said, "The recent issues families have had to endure are unacceptable and [the] agreements will help to protect consumers in future."

According to phone companies, aged and vulnerable clients might not be aware that the transition is taking place, and they are not always sure who has a telecare equipment.

They have advised local authorities and telecare services to share the data they have in their devices. Also, these phone companies have asked telecare firms to test their devices to confirm they will work properly following the change-over. 

Communication services company like the BT group has taken several measures to protect telecare and other vulnerable users, reliant on a landline during a power outage, such as providing battery backup units and hybrid phones with an integrated battery that can convert to a mobile network. 

In a blog post, director at BT Consumer, Lucy Baker wrote, "Over the past week, we've been informed about incidents involving telecare users from another communications provider who had been switched to a digital landline."  

WhatsApp: Instant Messaging App Services Restored After a 2 Hour Outage

The instant messaging app WhatsApp is restored after a two-hour-long outage on Tuesday. WhatsApp, with around a billion active users, was alerted about the global outage when hundreds of thousands of its online users reported the disruption in their messaging app. 

Reportedly, the instant messaging platform went down at 12:30 PM IST, on Tuesday. The users reported they were unable to send messages or make calls through the app, which was earlier thought of as a mere network connectivity issue. The outage was not limited to the smartphone users of the app, since users of WhatsApp web were also facing the same consequences of the disruption. 

As per a report by Downdetector, an online platform providing real-time stats and information regarding online web services, more than 11,000 online users had reported the outage, while in the United Kingdom the count was 68,000. While in Singapore, about 19,000 users reported disruption in the app since 07:50 GMT. 

Downdetector gathers status updates from various sources, including user-submitted errors on its platform, to keep track of outages. There may have been many users who were impacted by the outage. 

Additionally, WaBetaInfo, an online portal tracking WhatsApp services claimed that the issue is indeed from the server’s side and thus cannot be resolved from the online user’s end. 

Soon after acknowledging the issue, WhatsApp’s parent company Meta said that their engineers are working on the outage issue and will solve it as soon as possible. Following this, Meta Spokesperson even apologized to the users for the inconvenience.  

“We are aware that some people are currently having trouble sending messages and we are working to restore WhatsApp for everyone as quickly as possible,” says Meta Company Spokesperson. While the reason behind the outage is still not revealed by the parent company. 

Considering the popularity of the messaging app which has increasingly emerged as an important communication tool between users, businesses, and governments globally, over 100 billion messages are exchanged daily through WhatsApp as of 2020. This recent outage may have affected a large number of users, including government officials and telecom service providers.

AWS Suffers Third outage of the Month as East Coast Datacenter Loses Power

 

Amazon Web Services, the leading cloud computing platform, has suffered its third outage in two weeks, this time due to a power outage that impacted Slack, the Epic Games Store, and several other services. 

The AWS Service Health Dashboard blamed the data center in East Virginia that lost power in the early hours of the morning. The firm acknowledged that one of its data centers within the “single Availability Zone” lost power at 7:01 am this morning, though it claims that the issue was addressed about half an hour later. 

Additionally, the firm's support page warned that some of the services continued to linger for a portion of impacted EC2 instances. It also disclosed that some users of its EBS storage service were affected by "degraded IO performance" during the outage. 

Users reported problems after the outage, and the Epic Games Store noted that the AWS outage was causing problems "affecting logins, library, purchases, etc."

AWS experienced its first outage on December 7, which impacted cryptocurrency, brokerage, and entertainment services. Leading firms including Disney+, Netflix, Instacart, and McDonald’s suffered an outage on the very same U.S.-East-1 cloud region, caused by an “impairment of several network devices” which led to multiple API errors that impacted Amazon itself, as sellers were unable to access the e-commerce giant's Seller Center to manage orders.

One week later, on December 15, two AWS West Coast regions suffered an outage impacting services from the likes of Facebook, Slack, Hulu, and DoorDash. It remains unclear why AWS has experienced multiple hiccups times this month. However, the apps, services, games, and websites that rely on AWS for their own stability are almost certainly beginning to take a long, hard look at the impact these outages are having on their own bottom lines.

“The latest AWS outage highlights why it’s so critical for businesses to design their technology infrastructure for resilience, with no single point of failure,” Gleb Budman, co-founder, and CEO of cloud storage and data backup firm Backblaze told VentureBeat. “The truth is that anything and everything can fail. Smart organizations work from that assumption, and we see a growing number taking a multi-cloud approach, with data replicated not just across regions but across providers, and portability between providers, to address this specifically,” he added.