WhatsApp services were restored nearly two hours after it went down for users across many parts of the world Tuesday, which is one of the longest outages for the messaging social media platform recently.
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A spokesperson for WhatsApp owner Meta said;
We know people had trouble sending messages on WhatsApp today. We’ve fixed the issue and apologise for any inconvenience.
The outage had a cascading effect on other services offered by Whatsapp. Video calls and voice calls did not connect. Even the Status updates feature was not letting users share new posts. However, users were able to access pre-loaded media on the Status feature.
Users began reporting issues in the morning, when 25702 reports were posted, according to the service status website Down Detector which tracks online outages across the globe.
67 percent of users reported problems in sending messages while 26 percent reported problems in getting server connection.
Internet monitoring organization NetBlocks wrote on Twitter;
Messaging app WhatsApp is currently experiencing international outages; incident not related to country-level internet disruptions or filtering.
WhatsApp, which is one of the most popular messaging apps in the world, has about two billion active users across the globe.
WhatsApp Messenger is a cross-platform mobile messaging app for smartphones such as the iPhone, Android phones, Windows Mobile, or Blackberry. It allows users to send and receive messages, photos, and other information and is considered an alternative to text messages or SMS.
This is not the first time that WhatsApp stops functioning. Due to configuration change, WhatsApp as well as Facebook, Oculus and Instagram went down for six hours globally last year.