Hacking may be cause of Skype issues
Multiple countries, including UAE, currently suffering outages due to last week’s cyberattack
Several countries, including the UAE, Singapore, India, Pakistan and South Africa, suffer outages due to last week’s cyberattack
Yesterday, social media users in the UAE attempting to call relatives abroad reported that Skype calling seemed to be blocked. In the wake of this speculation, it appears that the recent problems with the application may be related to a cyber attack launched on the service last week.
According to a blog post from the application’s owner Microsoft, the company is “aware of an incident where users will either lose connectivity to the application or may be unable to send or receive messages.”
In an update last Tuesday, Microsoft said it was “continuing to monitor and we will post an update when the issue is fully resolved.”
Initially, social media users in the UAE suggested that the service may have been closed. However, on June 19, hacking group CyberTeam took credit for the issues that Skype was suffering from, posting on Twitter: “Skype down by CyberTeam.”
Disruptions
According to service monitor Down Detector, problems with Skype’s service are currently affecting users in the UAE and Japan. Over the past week, the site has reported disruptions across Europe, in addition to Singapore, India, Pakistan and South Africa.
CyberTeam has suggested on its Twitter page that their attack was caused by a Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack on Skype’s network.
The Luxembourg-based company appeared to confirm on June 23 that Skype had indeed been blocked in the UAE again, telling one user on Twitter that “unfortunately, Skype is blocked from the UAE and isn’t much within our control.”
Users on social media have been concerned about the outage of Skype, especially given the volume of calls that take place during Eid Al Fitr.