Twitter Inc (NYSE:TWTR) Is Up After Two Hours Of Outage

Twitter Inc (NYSE:TWTR) is back online now after nearly two-hours of outage early in the morning eastern time. Most of the users were not able to access the social web site even to log-in. The site was mocked for informing the users on the outage though no one was able to read the tweet. The affected regions were the United Kingdom, Japan, and the Europe.

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Mobile And Desktop

Though Twitter Inc (NYSE:TWTR) site has come back, it appeared that the users were not able to access from both the mobile, as well as, the desktop. That suggested that the problem could have been a serious one. The landing page said that something was wrong technically and that the social media firm would fix it up to bring it back to normal at the earliest.

Interestingly, Down Detector, which was known for reporting technical difficulties or apps, pointed out that France, German and the Britain were the hardest to be affected by unresponsiveness. Some of the areas within the region appeared to have been not affected. The social media company’s API status page was targeted at developers and indicated that some issues were plaguing a big part of the site. While admitting the issues in relation to the access, the company has worked quickly to resolve the issue. On Monday itself, some users appeared to have encountered problems in accessing Twitter Inc (NYSE:TWTR) at least for ten minutes when both the mobile and web platform suffered an outage.

Japan Also Suffered

Since the outage happened early around 3 in the Eastern Time, the impact was not felt fully in the United States. However, those who are functioning in the rest of the region had to bear the brunt of the outage. Though most of the other Asian nations witnessed a near normal activity, users in Japan could not have access to the social blogging site.

Users from Scandinavia or South Africa have complained that their most favored messages could not be delivered through Twitter Inc (NYSE:TWTR). A few regions have also experienced intermittent access through the mobile platform.