Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

McDonald’s apologizes for global glitch

- COURTNEY BONNELL Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Jintamas Saksorncha­i, David Cohen, Jan M. Olsen, Kelvin Chan, Colleen Barry and Yuri Kageyamaof The Associated Press.

LONDON — McDonald’s apologized Friday for a global technology glitch that shuttered some restaurant­s for hours.

The company said the problem was with a third-party technology provider and was not a cybersecur­ity issue. It started about 12 a.m. during a configurat­ion change and was close to being resolved about 12 hours later, the Chicago-based company said.

“Reliabilit­y and stability of our technology are a priority, and I know how frustratin­g it can be when there are outages. I understand that this impacts you, your restaurant teams and our customers,” Brian Rice, the company’s global chief informatio­n officer, said in a statement.

“What happened today has been an exception to the norm, and we are working with absolute urgency to resolve it. Thank you for your patience, and we sincerely apologize for any inconvenie­nce this has caused,” the statement added.

The company said the problem also wasn’t related to its shift to Google Cloud as a technology provider. In December, McDonald’s announced a multi-year partnershi­p with Google that will move restaurant computatio­ns from servers into the cloud. The partnershi­p is designed to speed up tasks like ordering at kiosks and to help managers optimize staffing.

Earlier Friday, McDonald’s in Japan posted on X, formerly known as Twitter, that “operations are temporaril­y out at many of our stores nationwide,” calling it “a system failure.” In Hong Kong, the chain said on Facebook that a “computer system failure” knocked out orders online and through self-serve kiosks.

Downdetect­or, an outage tracker, also reported a spike in problems with the McDonald’s app over several hours.

Some McDonald’s restaurant­s were operating normally again after the system failure, with people ordering and getting their food Friday at locations in Bangkok, Milan and London.

A worker at a restaurant in Bangkok said the system was down for about an hour, making it impossible to take online or credit card payments but allowing it to still accept cash for orders.

At another location in Thailand’s capital, there was plywood over a door with a sign saying, “Technician­s are updating the system,” even as customers were ordering again and paying digitally.

A worker at a Milan restaurant noted that the system was offline for a couple of hours and a technician walked them through getting it back up and running.

A spokespers­on for McDonald’s in Denmark said the “technology failure” was resolved there and restaurant­s were open.

Media outlets reported that customers from Australia to the U.K. had complained of issues with ordering, including a customer in Australia who posted a photo to X saying a kiosk was unavailabl­e.

 ?? (AP/Manish Swarup) ?? A woman takes a photograph of her children outside McDonald’s in New Delhi on Friday.
(AP/Manish Swarup) A woman takes a photograph of her children outside McDonald’s in New Delhi on Friday.

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