SAN FRANCISCO: A double outage rocked Twitter on Thursday, as users worldwide reported significant down-time and slow service across the website and mobile applications of the microblogging platform.
The outages left another bruise on a service that earned a reputation for unreliability in its early days.
The San Francisco-based company blamed the disruption on a “cascading bug” in one of its infrastructure components.
“One of the characteristics of such a bug is that it can have a significant impact on all users, worldwide, which was the case today,” Mazen Rawashdeh, a Twitter vice president of engineering, wrote in a blog post after normal service resumed.
“This wasn’t due to a hack or our new office or Euro 2012 or GIF avatars, as some have speculated today.”
“We are currently conducting a comprehensive review to ensure that we can avoid this chain of events in the future,” he added.
Twitter’s statements came amid speculation that hackers contributed to the disruption.
UgNazi — an emerging hacker outfit that recently gained publicity for breaking into Cloudflare Chief Executive Matthew Prince’s personal Google e-mail account — claimed credit for the service disruption in an e-mail to Reuters, saying it launched a distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack against Twitter because of the company’s support for the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act.
One security professional said the group probably used a DDoS-for-hire site to launch an attack against Twitter on Thursday, but played down the likelihood the group was responsible for bringing down the social media network.
“It was mere coincidence,” the security professional said. “The backend of Twitter is having issues, which is unrelated to the very small attack.”
North American traffic levels for Twitter.com plummeted on two occasions between 8.30 a.m. and 11.00 a.m., according to data provided by network analytics company Sandvine.
The first outage lasted between 8.30 a.m. and 10.00 a.m., data showed. Twitter acknowledged the disruption in a mid-morning blog post that was continually revised as the service resumed, only to fail for a second time before 11.00 a.m.
As the service resumed on Thursday, its most dedicated users quickly hopped back on to crack jokes, express relief and complain that during the outage they had nowhere to complain about the interruption.
Founded in 2006, Twitter was plagued in its early days by frequent outages as it struggled to handle the ever-rising volume of tweets, leaving frustrated users with its famous “fail whale” error screen.
In recent years, Twitter, under pressure to demonstrate financial viability, has devoted considerable resources toward improving reliability in a move to project itself as a mature, polished brand.
CEO Dick Costolo said this month that Twitter now has 140 million active monthly users who send 400 million tweets daily.
The company conceded on Thursday it had failed users who rely on it to connect with “heroes, causes, political movements.”
“It’s imperative that we remain available around the world,” said Rawashdeh, “and today we stumbled.”
Twitter blames outage on bug
Twitter blames outage on bug
Pakistan, Jordan discuss defense cooperation amid flurry of high-level contacts
- Field Marshal Asim Munir hosted Maj Gen Yousef Ahmed A. Al Huneiti of Jordan in Rawalpindi
- Munir visited Amman in October, followed by King Abdullah II’s trip to Pakistan the next month
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s army chief Field Marshal Asim Munir met the chairman of Jordan’s Joint Chiefs of Staff on Thursday to discuss defense and military cooperation, the Pakistani military said in a statement, amid a recent uptick in high-level engagement between the two countries.
Major General Yousef Ahmed A. Al Huneiti, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff of the Jordan Armed Forces, called on Munir at Pakistan’s military headquarters in Rawalpindi, according to a statement issued by the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR).
“During the meeting, both sides discussed matters of mutual interest, regional security dynamics, and avenues for enhanced bilateral defense and military cooperation,” ISPR said.
“Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir reaffirmed Pakistan’s commitment to strengthening defense ties with Jordan and emphasized the importance of collaborative efforts to address evolving security challenges,” it added.
The meeting follows a series of senior-level interactions between the two countries this year. Munir paid an official visit to Jordan in October, while Jordan’s military leadership has also engaged with Pakistan’s top brass in recent months.
In November, Jordan’s King Abdullah II visited Pakistan for talks with the country’s civilian and military leadership.
Pakistan and Jordan have long maintained cordial relations, including defense cooperation and military training links, though senior-level exchanges have been relatively infrequent.
Both countries were also among eight Muslim-majority states whose top leaders participated in discussions with United States President Donald Trump in September on proposals aimed at ending the war in Gaza and issued joint statements with other countries over the situation in West Asia in recent months.
ISPR said the meeting concluded with a shared resolve to further deepen military-to-military cooperation between Pakistan and Jordan.










