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IT Technology

How Downdetector Has Become Go-To Site for Online Disruptions (bloomberg.com) 26

An anonymous reader shares a report: When Facebook's platforms went down early on Oct. 4, the online tracker Downdetector was among the first places users looked to find out what was happening. Downdetector, which uses crowdsourcing to track outages, recognized Facebook's problems were dramatically different than a typical outage. Its system automatically released a notification, including a tweet, informing the internet of the disruption. The outage was among the biggest ever declared by Downdetector, said Luke Deryckx, chief technology officer at closely held Ookla LLC, the Seattle-based company that owns it. "Downdetector is a vehicle for users to report their experience," he said, adding that the company crowdsources "users' relationship with the internet." "In this case, we'd received a clear and almost instantaneous signal that there was a Facebook-related outage."

The idea of Downdetector was born over drinks at a bar in Haarlem, a city in the Netherlands, in February 2012. Tom Sanders and Sander van de Graaf were both working at IDG Communications Inc., the media publisher of magazines including CIO and Computerworld. Van de Graaf was a developer, and Sanders was the editor in chief. Readers would often call the newsroom to report an online outage at a company or service provider, but the reporters would often get no response -- or have to wait hours -- when they called to ask about the disruption. "We thought, wouldn't there be ways to automate this so we didn't have to check with the press office and we could get the data directly ourselves?" Van de Graaf said.

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How Downdetector Has Become Go-To Site for Online Disruptions

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  • Don't care really. Facebook went down and I didn't know until it was nearly over.
  • by TomGreenhaw ( 929233 ) on Wednesday October 06, 2021 @01:24PM (#61866947)
    I thought most people use https://downforeveryoneorjustm... [downforeve...justme.com]

    There are probably many of these.
    • by piojo ( 995934 )

      Yeah, I never heard of Down Detector. Though "[Is it] down for everyone or just me" is not my favorite URL. Do the omitted words make it harder to remember for everyone or just me?

      • WTF rock do you live under? For the last several years if you googled is X down, downdetector would usually be the 1st or at least in the top 5 results.
      • by znrt ( 2424692 )

        even the concept is just so 80s, "just me". anyone born around a console or a mobile phone has enough intuitive awareness of network behavior to know better. which makes it a poor domain name for the function. besides, as noted elsewhere, you just have to google "x down" and dozens of results will pop up. i'm a boomer myself so i'll assume i get a free camaraderie pass on calling you boomer :-P

  • I tried each of the "is it down" sites on Google's first page of results, and they were all timing out except for DownDetector. DD got sluggish pretty quickly too.

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      When asked how is Facebook doing, the various servers made a noise startlingly like that of an alarmed chicken, then burst into flames...

    • by EvilSS ( 557649 )
      I'm pretty shocked at the number of things that broke because FB vanished from the internet for 6 hours. A lot of ISPs had issues due to their DNS servers getting slammed from a barrage of DNS queries being retried over and over. A lot of websites that integrate FB APIs (for purely virtuous reasons, I'm sure) apparently never contemplated that the APIs could vanish and didn't code for it. Other social media sites getting slammed with traffic from people trying to find out what was going on and communicate w
  • by Luthair ( 847766 )
    They appear near or at the top of the results when someone types into Google "is [facebook|twitch|twitter] down"
  • Um, duh? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Wednesday October 06, 2021 @02:01PM (#61867063) Journal

    "How Downdetector Has Become Go-To Site for Online Disruptions" ....I'm going to guess it's become the 'go to' because they paid Google to have them as the first result in "is (whatever).com down" queries?

    This isn't rocket science, really.

    • And its pretty crappy for understanding if something is down anyway.

      • Not really, it's pretty good for confirming if something is borked in your PC or network that might be causing a particular site to not work. facebook.com not working? check downdetector. A fuckton of other people reporting issues? likely the cause isn't your PC or network and they are actually having an issue. If all is pretty silent, you might have an issue on your end, or you caught the issue early and others just haven't started complaining yet.
  • At various workplaces, we'd notice a site we needed became unresponsive (like an admin panel for O365, for example) and downdetector was one of the first sites that would come up in searches looking for others describing similar outages. That's how I first learned it existed, and started using it after that.

    I'm sure there are other good alternatives -- but the most useful feature I found w/downdetector was the ability for people to leave short comments after confirming a site isn't working for them. We cou

  • I frequently check the status of Minecraft on DownDetector. And I think it's a useful tool for those who need to know if their favorite service works well, without any possible issues. When I heard of Facebook, I went to it immediately to see what was going on. My personal review on the topic - cheapessaywriter [cheapessaywriter.co.uk] education + Facebook for UK students.

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