Panicked users call police after Facebook outage

A police officer has urged people not to call the police over an outage on Facebook, after panicked social media users dialled emergency and non-emergency numbers for police to report the issue.

Facebook

File. Source: Getty Images

A sergeant with the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department took to Twitter to express his dismay over the number of calls police fielded after Facebook experienced a brief outage.

The occurrence on Friday prompted a flurry of complaints and comments on Twitter less than two months after a similar incident affected users worldwide.
   
According to the website downdetector.com, the disruption began around 1600 GMT and appeared to last less than an hour.
   
"Earlier this morning, some people had trouble accessing Facebook for a short time," the California-based Internet titan said in reply to an AFP inquiry.
   
"We quickly investigated and are currently restoring service for everyone. We're sorry for the inconvenience."

Sergeant Burton Brink said the sheriff's office in Los Angeles fielded calls from panicked users on both the emergency and non-emergency numbers.

On Twitter, he fired off a post reminding users that a Facebook outage is not an issue for police officers.

Cause of Facebook outage unknown

Facebook has yet to pinpoint a cause, but the trouble appeared to be a technical issue.

During the outage, thousands of users complained they could not access the world's biggest social network.
   
Similar to the brief June service interruption, Facebook users took to Twitter to vent or post comments, many using the hashtag #facebookdown.
   
"Facebook is Down?! Oh God! Now How the Hell Am I Going to Find Out How My Friends Feel About Facebook Being Down?!" one user tweeted.
   
Another wrote: "Facebook going down for 15 minutes is proof that today's generation would've survived approximately 8 seconds in the 80s."
   
A Twitter user with the handle @TheTweetofGod wrote, "#facebookdown. Please remain calm and do not attempt to interact with human beings."


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Source: AFP


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