YouTube and Facebook hit by mass tech outage

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Facebook's services are among those affected
Facebook's services are among those affected - Dado Ruvic/Reuters

Users of YouTube and Facebook experienced disruption this afternoon, with hundreds of thousands of users reporting problems.

Issues began around 3pm, with the outage affecting Facebook and Instagram, which are owned by Meta, and YouTube, which is owned by Google. The outages have been tracked by the website Downdetector.

At 5:19pm, Meta announced that the outage affecting its services was now over. Google told The Telegraph that it “saw a surge in traffic ... and we scaled up our systems to serve the additional load.”

London-based internet monitoring firm Netblocks said that four Meta platforms - Facebook, Instagram, Messenger and Threads - were “experiencing outages related to login sessions in multiple countries.”

But the firm, which advocates for internet freedom, said there was no sign of “country-level internet disruptions or filtering”, which are typically imposed by governments.

According to a Google status website, there were also reports of problems with some of its services aimed at advertisers.

It is understood that the outages were not caused by a cyberattack.

Read the latest updates below.


06:32 PM GMT

Signing off

Thanks for joining us today. Chris and I will be back tomorrow to cover all the latest Budget news and analyst. In the meantime, here are some of the latest business stories from elsewhere on The Telegraph website:


05:54 PM GMT

Greensill Capital entrepreneur sues British Government

The Australian entrepreneur behind collapsed supply-chain finance business Greensill Capital is suing the British Government over alleged misuse of private information.

High Court records show Lex Greensill filed a lawsuit against the Department for Business and Trade last week, although details of the claim have not yet been made public.

A spokesman for Mr Greensill and the Business Department declined to comment on the lawsuit.

Greensill, which at one stage was valued at $3.5bn (£2.75bn) filed for administration in 2021 after one of its insurers failed to renew its cover and it was unable to repay a $140m loan to Credit Suisse. Companies could use Greensill to borrow money to pay suppliers early, but companies it had lent money to had defaulted.

Its failure also led to questions over lobbying by Lord Cameron, now the Foreign Secretary, who had pushed for Greensill to gain access to the Covid-19 loans scheme.