Google
apologized Friday after the Internet giant’s widely used free email and an
array of other services were disrupted by apparent software woes.
“Earlier
today (Friday), most Google users who use logged-in services like Gmail,
Google+, Calendar and Documents found they were unable to access those services
for approximately 25 minutes,” Google engineering vice president Ben Treynor
said in a blog post.
“For
about 10 percent of users, the problem persisted for as much as 30 minutes
longer.”
Google
did not disclose the full extent of the Gmail glitch but the brief outage was
believed to have affected millions of people, including those using the service
at work.
Complaints
were posted online from Europe, Canada, the United States and elsewhere.
An
online Google Apps tracking dashboard, which indicated that a dozen services —
including Gmail and its social network Google+ — had experienced problems.
“Whether
the effect was brief or lasted the better part of an hour, please accept our
apologies-we strive to make all of Google’s services available and fast for
you, all the time, and we missed the mark today,” Treynor said.
“The
issue has been resolved, and we’re now focused on correcting the bug that
caused the outage, as well as putting more checks and monitors in place to ensure
that this kind of problem doesn’t happen again.”
Rival
Yahoo, whose own Web-based email service experienced a massive outage in
December, was quick to join a chorus on Twitter spreading word of the Gmail
issue.
Yahoo
even tweeted a screen capture of a Google message apologizing for the problem.
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