Marin Independent Journal

Widespread internet outages hit northeast US

- By Tali Arbel, Matt O’Brien and Frank Bajak

Internet users across the northeast U.S. experience­d widespread outages for several hours Tuesday, interrupti­ng work and school because of an unspecifie­d Verizon network issue.

“An internet issue impacting the quality of our Fios service throughout the Northeast has been resolved,” said spokesman Rich Young in an emailed statement Tuesday afternoon. He said service levels “are returning to normal” and the company is investigat­ing what happened. The service interrupti­ons were unrelated to a cut fiber in Brooklyn, New York, which caused problems for people in the area.

There are about 6.5 million Fios internet customers.

People posting on Twitter reported having issues connecting with various online services in the region stretching from Washington, D.C., to Boston. That densely populated area includes key U.S. government services as well as major financial companies such as Fidelity Investment­s.

More pain

Disruption­s to internet services are always a hassle, but have become even more excruciati­ng as the pandemic forces millions of people to work from home and students to attend school remotely.

Diana Gaspar’s daughter in New York couldn’t connect to her online classroom because their home internet was spotty for a couple of hours in the afternoon, although her daughter was able to log in with Gaspar’s phone.

“We didn’t see it as a major issue,” Gaspar said. “The only inconvenie­nce was me not having my phone.”

Schools

For the Fairfax County Public Schools in the Washington, D.C., suburbs, teachers and students found workaround­s, such as switching to another instructio­n platform if one wasn’t working, said spokeswoma­n Lucy Caldwell. When her thirdgrade daughter’s teacher couldn’t log on to the education software they were using, a gym teacher came on to tell kids to do independen­t learning instead, said Fairfax parent Tracy Compton.

“My daughter came to me and I had to stop working and I had to work with her to do the assignment,” Compton said, nothing that frustratin­g tech issues are not unusual with remote learning.

At Galvin Middle School in Wakefield, Massachuse­tts, a suburb north of Boston, teachers sent students pen-and-paper assignment­s if there were internet problems, said Trish Dellanno, reached at the school by phone. “Teachers have been able to keep on moving. They’re going old school.”

The outage affected internet and cloud providers as well as major sites such as Google and Facebook. Amazon, whose web services division powers a wide ranges of online services, indicated its network wasn’t the cause of the problem and that connectivi­ty issues for its Amazon Web Services customers were resolved around 12:45 p.m., after an hour and a half. Google said it also had not found issues with its own services and was investigat­ing.

When it started

The East Coast outages began at 11:25 a.m. local time and recovery began at 12:37 p.m, according to Doug Madory, director of internet analysis at Kentik, a network monitoring company. He reported a 12% drop in traffic volume to Verizon.

Madory said he did not yet know if other carriers were impacted. Comcast, another major internet service provider, said it had not observed problems with its network Tuesday. AT&T said it does not supply home internet in the northeast and customers were not affected.

Cary Wiedemann, a network engineer who had connectivi­ty problems at his home in Northern Virginia, said that some online services could have been disrupted even if your home internet still worked, if the issue was with the backbone of Verizon’s network.

“If Outlook works but YouTube doesn’t, whose fault is it? Verizon’s fault. But that’s not obvious from the onset,” he said.

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