Skype
outage caused by download update
By MATT MOORE, AP Business Writer
August 20 2007
A
two-day outage that left millions of Skype users unable to use the popular Internet
phone service was caused by an abnormally high number of restarts after people
had downloaded a Windows security update, the company said Monday.
The
worldwide outage, which began on Thursday and ended on Saturday, left millions
of Skype users unable to log on to make phone calls or send instant messages.
Luxembourg-based
Skype Ltd., part of online auction giant eBay Inc., has more than 220 million
users in total but typically has 5 million to 6 million users online at any given
time. In January, Skype reported that it had counted 9 million users online at
one time.
In
an update to users on Skype's Heartbeat blog, employee Villu Arak said the disruption
was not because of hackers or any other malicious activity.
Instead,
he said that the disruption "was triggered by a massive restart of our users'
computers across the globe within a very short timeframe as they re-booted after
receiving a routine set of patches through Windows Update," Arak wrote.
Microsoft
Corp. released its monthly patches last Tuesday, and many computers are set to
automatically download and install them. Installation requires a computer restart.
"The
high number of restarts affected Skype's network resources. This caused a flood
of log-in requests, which, combined with the lack of peer-to-peer network resources,
prompted a chain reaction that had a critical impact," Arak wrote.
Arak
did not blame Microsoft for the troubles and said the outage ultimately rested
with Skype. Arak said Skype's network normally has an ability to heal itself in
such cases, but a previously unknown glitch in Skype's software prevented that
from occurring quickly enough.
Users
from Vietnam to Brazil to Germany to the United States had complained they could
not log on and make phone calls or send instant messages.
The
outage was a critical moment for the company, founded in 2003 by Niklas Zennstrom
and Janus Friis, and was the first major outage since October 2005 when its service
was down only for a few hours.
"This
disruption was unprecedented in terms of its impact and scope," Arak wrote.
"We would like to point out that very few technologies or communications
networks today are guaranteed to operate without interruptions."
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