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Blackberry Service Crash Affects Bbm Messaging For Millions


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BlackBerry service crash affects BBM messaging for millions

RIM acknowledges ongoing email and messaging problem for customers in Europe, Middle East and Africa

Tens of millions of BlackBerry users in Europe, the Middle East and Africa have been unable to receive or send emails and messages through their phones, following an outage at the server systems of parent company Research In Motion (RIM) in Slough, Berkshire.

The outage, which occurred at about 11am BST on Monday, was still affecting users more than four hours later with no time given for when it was expected to be resolved.

The company released a brief acknowledgement of the problem at 3.30pm, saying: "We are working to resolve an issue currently impacting some BlackBerry subscribers in Europe, the Middle East and Africa. We're investigating, and we apologise to our customers for any inconvenience caused while this is resolved."

BlackBerry systems receive and send emails and BlackBerry Messenger (BBM) communications via encrypted connections to RIM servers located around the world. The systems are particularly popular in a number of Middle East countries where they allow secure communication that the government cannot tap. RIM has come into conflict with a number of governments around the world, which have demanded oversight of email and BBM messages.

The failure will be a huge embarrassment for the company, which has been successful in building up its user base in the so-called "EMEA" (Europe, Middle East, Africa) region even while it has been losing users in North America.

At the end of August, RIM claimed that it had more than 70 million subscribers around the world. In July it claimed to have added 1 million subscribers in the EMEA region in less than three weeks. It would certainly have more than 10 million users in the total region.

The cause of the outage is not known, but one former RIM employee has told the Guardian that RIM has been ignoring problems with its server architecture that could prove its downfall for years. "They didn't start looking at scalability until about 2007, when they had around 8m active devices," the former employee said: "The attitude was, 'We're going to grow and grow but making sure our infrastructure can support it isn't a priority.' They have their own clunky infrastructure to do something that you don't really need a clunky infrastructure to do anymore."

The dramatic growth in the number of subscribers worldwide – nearly tenfold since 2007 – will have put serious strain on RIM's servers if such scalability has not been addressed urgently.

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Posted

UPDATE:

BlackBerry outage: UK executive says staff working 'day and night' on fix

Apology from RIM's UK managing director as BlackBerry disruption enters third day from problems at Slough centre

BlackBerry users in Europe, the Middle East and Africa have been experiencing problems with emails and messaging due to a power outage in Slough, UK. Photograph: Shannon Stapleton/Reuters

Engineers are working "day and night" to try to fix the problem with BlackBerry services which are entering their third day of outages, the UK and Ireland managing director has said.

Stephen Bates told the BlackBerry Innovation Forum in London on Wednesday morning that staff at Research In Motion (RIM) in Slough "thought we had found the problem [bB outage] but had not. We are working around the clock to get to the bottom of the problem."

He added that "We are working night and day to solve the outage. Our apologies to all our customers."

It was the first public statement by a senior executive at the company, which has 70m users around the world. Problems at its Slough offices, where servers relay messages and web pages for millions of users in Europe, the Middle East, Africa and India, have meant that users have been unable to communicate except by phone. Services in some South American countries have also been disrupted.

The problems began at about 11am on Monday. The Guardian understands that RIM was attempting a software upgrade on its database but suffered corruption problems, and that attempts to switch back to an older version led to a collapse.

Bates said that the problem was "not acceptable", that the "server issues are regarded with high focus" and that RIM "is not going to stop until they get to the end of the problem".

The timing of the problems is made more embarrassing for RIM because it happens on the same day that Apple is scheduled to release a major update to its mobile phone software, iOS 5, which will bring a capability called "iMessage" that competes directly with RIM's BlackBerry Messenger. On Friday, carriers and Apple will start sales of its new iPhone 4S.

RIM is presently running an expensive TV campaign for its new generation of smartphones in the UK aimed at consumers, but Twitter has seen an outpouring of angry messages from disaffected users who are threatening to defect.

RIM has given no timing for a resolution of the problem. In a statement issued at 2200 BST on Tuesday, it said: "The messaging and browsing delays being experienced by BlackBerry users in Europe, the Middle East, Africa, India, Brazil, Chile and Argentina were caused by a core switch failure within RIM's infrastructure. Although the system is designed to failover to a back-up switch, the failover did not function as previously tested. As a result, a large backlog of data was generated and we are now working to clear that backlog and restore normal service as quickly as possible. We apologise for any inconvenience and we will continue to keep you informed."

Source: guardian.co.uk

Posted

While this *could* be just a disgruntled ex-employee....

The cause of the outage is not known, but one former RIM employee has told the Guardian that RIM has been ignoring problems with its server architecture that could prove its downfall for years. "They didn't start looking at scalability until about 2007, when they had around 8m active devices," the former employee said: "The attitude was, 'We're going to grow and grow but making sure our infrastructure can support it isn't a priority.' They have their own clunky infrastructure to do something that you don't really need a clunky infrastructure to do anymore."

...it's exactly the picture I have of RIM, looking in from the outside. Just judging from their handset software, which they didn't update for years, which wasn't well designed, and which they eventually moved to a new platform they bought from a 3rd party.

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