Twitter was unavailable for users worldwide on Tuesday morning, with the site apparently suffering a total outage followed by serious access problems lasting over an hour.
Access to the service began failing over the web, mobile and its API (application programming interface, the system that applications use to speak to the Twitter service) at 8:20am GMT, with error messages warning the network is both âover capacityâ and suffering an âinternal errorâ. By 10:00am, the majority of the service had returned to some semblance of normality.
Twitterâs own status board updated at 9:00, confirming the outage, and the companyâs developer-facing monitoring confirmed that four of the five public APIs were down, suffering a âservice disruptionâ. At 8:47, the search API was upgraded to âperformance issuesâ. By 8:55am, a second API was upgraded to âperformance issuesâ, and some users were able to sporadically access the service.
The company initially confirmed the outage by, somehow, tweeting, from its @support account. We were unable to see the tweet, because Twitter was down. Twitter emailed the text of the tweet to the Guardian, which read: âSome users are currently experiencing problems accessing Twitter. We are aware of the issue and are working towards a resolution.â
In the early days of the service, Twitter outages were common enough that the companyâs âover capacityâ error message gained a nickname: the fail whale.
There you go,if you still wondering why you can’t access Twitter.
Credits:The Guardian