channelnewsasia.com - Twitter goes down, users 'tweet' about it
   
 
  blogs  
 
yournews
   
   
Video Finance Lifestyle Travel Weather Discussion TV Shows
CNA Live    | About Us 
 
  Home ›
 
Technology News
Smaller Text Size Larger Text Size

 
 

Twitter goes down, users 'tweet' about it
Posted: 09 October 2009 0814 hrs

 
 
Photos  of

   
 

WASHINGTON - Twitter went down on Thursday prompting devotees of the micro-blogging service to share how they coped without it.

"I WAS FORCED TO TEXT MSG," lamented a user named "Misskette."

"I found a life," tweeted "JeremyTaylor09."

"I coped with my Twitter withdrawal by screaming what I was doing at the top of my lungs," said "MoL42."

"JPreister" said she "got more work done this afternoon than like ever."

The philosophical "PBHouse" mused: "If you tweet and Twitter is frozen does it make a sound?"

The political "Watchj" said: "I'm sure the Republicans will find some way to blame this on Obama."

Many Twitter users stopped receiving the 140-character-or-less messages known as "tweets" shortly before 11:00 am (1500 GMT) and did not regain normal service until several hours later.

When "tweets" began to flow normally again, the top "trending topic" on Twitter was users telling others what they did "when Twitter was down."

The San Francisco-based company explained the disruption as a "bug" in one of the "core services that powers Twitter."

Twitter last month closed a deal for "significant" new financing despite having yet to show how it is going to make money.

It did not reveal the amount of the funding but The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times put the figure at up to 100 million US dollars and said it valued Twitter at one billion US dollars.

Twitter has grown rapidly in popularity since it was launched in August 2006 and claims to have topped 50 million users.

Twitter last suffered a major disruption in August when it came under a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack along with Facebook and other social networking sites.

The accounts of a pro-Georgian blogger were identified as the target of the DDoS attacks believed to be an attempt to silence his online criticism of Moscow's role in last year's Georgia-Russia war.

Classic DDoS attacks involve legions of zombie computers, machines infected with viruses, which are commanded to simultaneously visit a website, overwhelming its servers.

- AFP/ir

 

 
Bookmark and Share



Other technology News
News Corp, Microsoft hold talks on locking out Google
Google-powered netbooks to debut next year
Webby Awards name top 10 Internet moments of the decade
How to be a Movie Maker in under an hour
Bing gains search market share, nears 10 per cent
Google submits revised digital book settlement to US judge
Racy red pocket rocket
Online activists hijack Facebook groups
The iPhone's First Worm
'Cloud' computing market US$14b by 2014: Gartner
Google ordered to pay US$500,000 to F1 racer Barrichello
"Modern Warfare 2" strikes on Tuesday
Judge orders US music website to drop Beatles songs
Nike+ SportBand = Accurate running buddy
Louvre's Mona Lisa smiles on Apple

 

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions