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Bell warns of outage impacting Fibe TV customers

Bell warned via its support account on Twitter that Fibe TV customers “may be experiencing a service outage.”

The company says it’s working to restore services as quickly as possible.

While Bell didn’t specify where the service outage was impacting people, but the website Downdetector indicates the issue is primarily impacting customers in southern Ontario and Quebec, as well as New Brunswick and Nova Scotia.

Downdetector map of Bell issues as of March 22nd, 2023

Moreover, Downdetector notes that 68 percent of reported issues were related to TV.

Source: Bell

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Mobile Syrup

Fitbit experiencing outage, sync and other services not working

Fitbit appears to be down right now, causing sync issues and missing data on both the Android and iOS apps.

Currently, if you open the Fitbit app, some stats should be missing or showing incomplete data. Moreover, trying to sync generally leads to an error, including for those rocking Google’s fancy new Pixel Watch.

9to5Google noted that the ‘My Dashboard’ website is down too, but Fitbit’s shop is still up and running.

The website Downdetector shows the outage is fairly widespread throughout Canada, with outage reports spiking around shortly after 8am ET this morning. Reports appear to have peaked around 10:12am, though the outage is ongoing.

Fitbit’s support account tweeted that it’s aware of the issue and is working to resolve it. However, it remains unclear what caused the outage in the first place.

Source: Fitbit Via: 9to5Google

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Mobile Syrup

Advocacy agencies call on Minister Champagne to end Canada’s telecom monopoly

Non-profit Canadian advocacy agencies OpenMedia and Leadnow got over 28,000 petition signatures and called for an end to Canada’s telecom monopoly.

In a press release sent to MobileSyrup, OpenMedia said it and Leadnow issued a joint statement to Innovation, Science, and Economic Development (ISED) Minister François-Philippe Champagne. The statement highlights issues with Canada’s telecom monopoly and calls for guaranteed affordable, reliable high-speed internet for all Canadians.

The statement comes as a response to the July 8th Rogers outage — called ‘Red Friday’ by some — which saw the company’s wireless and wireline network collapse, taking out mobile, internet and other services for millions of Canadians for some 19 hours. Many were impacted well beyond the initial scope of the outage. Moreover, Red Friday prevented Canadians from accessing emergency and financial services.

“July’s Rogers outage must be a turning point for Canada. People from coast to coast are waking up to how rigged our telecom system has become, functioning primarily to benefit Rogers, Telus, and Bell at the expense of ordinary Canadians,” the statement reads.

OpenMedia highlighted key options for reducing the monopoly power of telecom in Canada, which include creating a national public competitor to deliver internet services, expanding support for local public ownership of community networks, structural separation of telecom companies that own wireline and wireless services, and mandating telecom network access for small companies, which would increase competition and help reduce prices.

It remains to be seen what impact, if any, this has on the government’s response to Red Friday. Champagne has already demanded the major telecom players work together to develop a fallback system for future outages, the House of Commons committee on industry (INDU) is studying the Rogers outage, and the company answered CRTC questions about what happened. However, some have criticized Rogers for promoting transparency while heavily redacting its response to the CRTC, while others believe the government’s response — such as mandating the major telecom players work together — will worsen competition issues.

You can read the full statement from OpenMedia and Leadnow here.

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Mobile Syrup

Rogers responds to CRTC questions over outage, will split network

Rogers’ response to questions from the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) about the July 8th outage — or ‘Red Friday,’ as Vass Bednar has taken to calling it — arrived late on July 22nd in a document filed to the CRTC’s website.

The lengthy, partially-redacted document (which downloads a .docx file) includes responses to various CRTC questions, with explanations about what happened, what Rogers will do to keep it from happening again, who was affected, and more. Rogers opens the document with a note that it will be “as transparent as possible” when answering the CRTC’s questions but also asked the CRTC to treat certain information in the document as confidential to protect the company’s customers, network, and vendors.

Frustratingly, Rogers redacted many details of its plans to prevent future outages.

Still, some of the broader goals remain available to the public. Rogers confirmed in the document that it plans to “increase resiliency in our networks and systems which will include fully segregating our wireless and wireline core networks,” as was previously reported by MobileSyrup.

Details on what caused the outage

Moreover, Rogers provided additional details about the cause of the outage. Previously, the company had said a maintenance update caused routers in its network to malfunction.

In the Friday disclosures, Rogers detailed that the update was the sixth in a seven-phase process that started on February 8th. The previous five phases “proceeded without incident.” That sixth stage began at 2:27am on July 8th (the company notes it usually performs upgrades at times when traffic is low). The update contained a coding error that started the issue at 4:43am, which cascaded through Rogers’ core network “very quickly.”

That coding error deleted a “routing filter” in Rogers’ distribution routers, which allowed all possible routes to the internet to flow through the routers. Rogers explains that this caused the routers to propagate “abnormally high volumes of routes throughout the core network,” leading certain network equipment to exceed capacity and fail.

Rogers goes on to describe that it uses a “common core” network — like “many large Telecommunications Services Providers” (TSPs) — that combines wireless, wireline and other sources. The company explains that its core consists of various vendors’ equipment, that different equipment can have different designs and routing management protocols, and that these differences are “at the heart of the outage.”

Rogers notes that the outage impacted employees, preventing them from connecting to the company’s IT and network infrastructure. While some Rogers employees were able to communicate with each other using Bell or Telus SIM cards they received as part of a 2015 emergency contingency plan established between the carriers, staff still had to travel to centralized locations to access the network and begin sorting out what went wrong and how to fix it. This contributed to delays in restoring service.

Again, much of this mirrors previous MobileSyrup reporting about what caused the outage, although there are some new details that weren’t known before. Primarily, previous external analysis of the outage indicated that the issues stemmed from gateway routers, whereas Rogers says the outage started with distribution routers.

Rogers says it couldn’t transfer customers to competitors’ networks

As the Globe and Mail highlights in its report, Rogers revealed in the disclosure that it couldn’t transfer customers to competitors’ networks during the outage.

Bell and Telus offered Rogers assistance, but the company determined it couldn’t transfer customers to the other networks since some aspects of Rogers’ network — such as the centralized user database — weren’t accessible due to the outage. Moreover, Rogers says that competitors’ networks wouldn’t “have been able to handle the extra and sudden volume of wireless users (over 10.2M) and the related voice/data traffic surge.”

Particularly interesting about this is the government response. Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne directed Canadian telecom companies to develop a mutual assistance agreement to help each other during outages following the events of Red Friday. Given that Rogers couldn’t transfer customers to other networks and the claim that other networks couldn’t handle the surge in traffic, it remains unclear how telecoms could implement a mutual assistance structure without significant changes to each company’s network. Moreover, if Bell and Telus also use common core networks — as Rogers implies — then those networks are also potentially vulnerable to the same failure as Rogers’ network.

Still, Rogers said it will explore various mutual assistance options with other companies before delivering a formalized agreement to the minister in September.

Changes to the update review process and communication

Rogers also noted in the disclosure that it went through a “comprehensive planning process including scoping, budget approval, project approval, kickoff, design document, method of procedure, risk assessment, and testing, finally culminating in the engineering and implementation phases” for the update.

The company stressed that it makes updates to the core network “very carefully.”

However, Rogers said it would review the process it uses to plan and implement updates to the network. The company also detailed plans to improve communication between its teams and the public when it comes to outages.

Changes include giving communication teams backup devices on alternate networks to use if Rogers’ network fails, updating policies and procedures for sharing updates in the event of a “network blackout,” increasing the frequency of updates, providing information across all channels about impacts to critical services like 9-1-1, and ensuring all statements posted to social media include the use of alt text.

That last one is particularly interesting given Rogers and its flanker brands posted updates to Twitter using pictures, but people with visual impairments may not be able to read the text in a picture. Alt text provides descriptions of image appearance and function, which can be picked up by technology like screen readers to help people with visual impairments understand images.

What’s next

A House of Commons committee on industry and technology plans to study the outage and will have a hearing Monday. The Globe and Mail notes that Rogers replaced its chief technology officer (CTO), Jorge Fernandes, just days before this hearing.

Telecom veteran Ron McKenzie replaced Fernandes — as MobileSyrup reported, the change is unlikely to disrupt Rogers’ plans to address the outage by separating wireless and wireline traffic.

The Globe expects the committee, which includes members from all four major federal parties, will question Rogers executives about the outage and five-day credit delivered to customers to compensate them for the outage. Critics previously questioned whether the credit was enough, given the scope of the damage was far beyond not having service for several days. Moreover, a Quebec resident has filed a class-action lawsuit against the company seeking $400 for each customer impacted by the outage.

Those interested in diving into the details shared by Rogers can read the disclosure in full here (note the link will download a .docx file).

Source: CRTC (.docx file) Via: The Globe and Mail

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Mobile Syrup

Rogers to separate wireless, wireline traffic to prevent outages like July 8th

Rogers plans to separate its wireless and wireline networks through adjustments to its core network, MobileSyrup has learned. It could take up to 18 months to build the separation, with the migration likely happening in two years.

Rogers’ Chief Technology Officer (CTO), Jorge Fernandes, announced the plan at an all-hands meeting Friday. This solution appears to be Rogers’ answer to the question of how to prevent a massive outage like the one that took down the company’s wireless and wireline networks on July 8th.

Rogers currently runs what’s called an all-IP network. That means it puts all traffic (wireless, wireline, telephone, etc.) through the same core network, which is why both services failed during the July 8th outage. Based on evidence gathered by researchers and information previously shared with MobileSyrup, it appears Rogers’ Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) routers malfunctioned after a maintenance update on July 8th. Those routers are responsible for handling all the traffic and transferring it between Rogers’ network and the wider internet. For more on this, read MobileSyrup’s deep dive into the outage here.

All-IP networks can be described as being like an FM radio where instead of having multiple stations to tune into, there’s one tuning that contains every station. MobileSyrup understands that Rogers’ plan is to add what’s essentially a ‘second tuning’ to its FM radio and migrate some ‘stations’ to the second tuning. Put another way, the company will maintain two core pipelines to the internet and will likely separate wireless traffic (such as 5G and LTE) and wireline traffic (like fibre), putting one in each pipeline.

It’s unclear if the separate pipelines would act as fallbacks for each other, enabling wireless and wireline traffic to stay up if one of the pipes goes down. Presumably, Rogers will go this route, but at the very least, the change should prevent an outage from taking down wireless and wireline at the same time. It also isn’t clear how much it will cost the company to make this separation, although MobileSyrup understands it will be expensive.

MobileSyrup understands the changes will apply deep in the core of Rogers’ network and should not be felt by customers. From the perspective of Rogers subscribers, nothing will change.

Rogers did not respond to MobileSyrup’s request for comment in time for publication.

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Mobile Syrup

Twitter outage preventing tweets from loading, logins

Twitter is down and appears to be experiencing a major outage Thursday morning. Canadians can breathe a sigh of relief — Rogers is not down again.

According to Ookla’s Downdetector website, outage reports for Twitter spiked shortly after 8am ET. However, as noted by The Verge, Twitter’s status site shows that everything is working just fine. While users can still navigate to the Twitter website, tweets don’t load nor can people tweet. The Verge also reported that you can’t log into the website right now.

At the moment, it’s not clear what caused the issue.

Downdetector map showing areas impacted by Twitter’s July 14th outage.

The Verge reports that this is the first major Twitter outage since the service went down twice in February. Some people weren’t able to access Twitter in some parts of the U.S. due to a “technical bug” that stopped timelines from loading and tweets from posting.

Developing…

Source: Twitter, Downdetector Via: The Verge

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Mobile Syrup

Rogers’ five-day credit might not be enough: report

Following complaints about an initial plan to credit customers for two days’ worth of service, Rogers upped its credit to five days’ worth of service. However, that still may not be enough.

Richard Leblanc, a law and ethics professor at York University, told CTV News that Rogers’ credit offering is “wholly inadequate.” Leblanc argues that the damage to individuals and small businesses can’t be “quantified solely on the basis of a portion of a monthly fee.”

In other words, Rogers needs to consider more than just what customers pay it for services and refunding them for the days the service wasn’t available or disrupted. Leblanc explained that there’s much more beyond just what people pay Rogers — businesses couldn’t accept payments, sales were missed, people couldn’t attend meetings, and so on.

Rogers’ wireless and wireline services went down early in the morning on July 8th and the outage persisted well into the evening and through the weekend. Customers of Rogers and the company’s flanker brands, Chatr and Fido, were left without wireless service, home internet, TV, or any combination of those services. The outage disrupted payment and financial systems, government services, emergency and 9-1-1, and more.

Leblanc told CTV that Rogers should consider tailoring compensation to better fit its individual, household and business customers.

It’s worth considering that how Rogers responds to the outage may have an impact going forward, for example, with regard to lawsuits. A Quebec resident has already filed a class-action lawsuit against Rogers over the outage seeking $400 for members impacted by the Rogers outage. Leblanc thinks more legal action will likely follow.

For more on the Rogers outage, check out MobileSyrup’s deep dive here.

Source: CTV News

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Mobile Syrup

Rogers CEO says July 8th outage caused by ‘maintenance update’

Rogers CEO Tony Staffieri published another update about Friday’s day-long outage, finally detailing some of what went wrong.

“We now believe we’ve narrowed the cause to a network system failure following a maintenance update in our core network, which caused some of our routers to malfunction early Friday morning,” Staffieri wrote. “We disconnected the specific equipment and redirected traffic, which allowed our network and services to come back online over time as we managed traffic volumes returning to normal levels.”

Moreover, Staffieri said he was “troubled” that customers weren’t able to reach emergency service during the outage and said Rogers is addressing the issue “as an urgent priority.”

Finally, Staffieri laid out three pillars of the company’s action plan following the outage. First, the company plans to fully restore all services. Staffieri said this was nearly finished, but the company is still monitoring stability across the network.

Next, Rogers intends to complete analysis and testing of the root cause of the outage. Part of this goal is to increase redundancy in Rogers’ network.

Finally, Rogers will make necessary changes to “increase network stability for our customers, and enhance our testing.”

You can read the CEO’s words in full here.

This is the most information Rogers has provided about the outage so far. Rogers’ network went down early on the morning of July 8th, disrupting wireless and internet services for customers, including Rogers’ flanker brands Fido and Chatr. Moreover, the outage impacted government and financial services, businesses, and even caused several events to be postponed.

Cloudflare previously shared an analysis of Rogers’ network based on internet traffic, suggesting the issue was an internal problem and not the result of a cyberattack. It appears that the analysis was correct.

Rogers also reiterated that it would automatically apply credits to compensate customers for the outage, clarifying that there would be no action required from people to claim the credit. The clarification comes as the company acknowledged ongoing scam messages using the promised credit to target customers.

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Mobile Syrup

PSA: Don’t fall for the incoming Rogers outage scams

Amid Friday’s massive Rogers service outage and subsequent restoration, the Toronto-based telecom has repeatedly promised to credit customers. However, Rogers hasn’t said how it will go about it, and now the scam messages are rolling out.

So, here’s your first official warning: do not click any links in any message you get about a credit for the Rogers outage. Honestly, that should be your default behaviour — clicking links, especially those received in unsolicited messages from untrusted sources, is one of the main ways that phishing scams work. People click the link and then provide sensitive information like login credentials to a fake website and boom! they’ve been phished.

Again, if you get a text, call, or other message from someone claiming to be from Rogers offering a credit for Friday’s outage, do not share any personal information or click any links.

So do yourself a favour and ignore these scams if you see them. Help your neighbour and spread the word. Do your part. Don’t get phished.

Of course, the thing that would most help stop these scams would be Rogers officially detailing how and when it will credit customers. Likely, the promised credits will come via your next Rogers bill — the company did promise to “proactively” credit users, which suggests people won’t need to do anything to claim the credit. Still, knowing for certain would go a long way to discrediting any scam message that goes against the official plan for crediting customers.

Speaking of credits, there’s also a question of what will happen for customers who subscribe to non-Rogers services that rely on Rogers internet. Wholesale internet service providers (ISPs) like TekSavvy come to mind. However, reports indicate Tbaytel is offering its customers a credit, which suggests wholesalers may receive a credit that could get passed along to their customers. It remains to be seen how this whole situation shakes out.

For now, stay safe out there and don’t get scammed!

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Mobile Syrup

Here are some of the major events and venues disrupted by Rogers’ outage

Yesterday was absolute chaos for most Canadians thanks to a massive, day-long Rogers outage that took down internet and wireless services and disrupted financial services, businesses, government services and more. While we previously documented some of the many services impacted by the Rogers outage, it’s also worth noting that the outage disrupted several big events slated for July 8th.

From The Weeknd to the Calgary Stampede, here are some of the surprising events impacted by Rogers:

The Weeknd

Toronto’s own The Weeknd was set to light up the Rogers Centre (formerly Skydome) on July 8th, kicking off his ‘After Hours Til Dawn’ stadium tour. Unfortunately for fans, the show got postponed.

The news came (hilariously) via a tweet from the official Toronto Blue Jays account, warning that “service outages impacting venue operations” lead to postponing the show. I particularly like how the Rogers-owned Blue Jays didn’t feel the need to specify that it was a Rogers service outage that postponed the show. The tweet promised a new show date would be announced ASAP and tickets would be honoured.

About an hour later, The Weeknd shared a message with fans on Twitter, saying he was “crushed [and] heartbroken” but that it was “out of our hands because of the Rogers outage.”

“Operations and safety are compromised and I tried my absolute best. This one hurts the most, and we will make this show happen, but unfortunately not tonight,” he wrote.

Peter Nygard

Canadian fashion mogul Peter Nygard was due to appear in a Montreal court via video conference on July 8th, but the appearance was postponed due to the Rogers outage.

Nygard faces one count each of sexual assault and forcible confinement in Quebec and is accused of 11 counts of sexual assault and three counts of forcible confinement in Toronto related to allegations from the late 1980s and mid-2000s. Nygard also faces extradition to the U.S. over sex-related charges there.

According to CBC News, prosecutor Jerome Laflamme said it was impossible to have Nygard appear in the Quebec court because of the outage. Nygard is currently detained in a Toronto jail.

Calgary Stampede

While not as big of an impact, the Rogers outage did disrupt the Calgary Stampede, which started July 8th. The official Calgary Stampede Twitter account posted a message asking attendees to “come prepared with cash or credit” because of the Rogers outage impacting some methods of payment.

Scotiabank Arena, Massey Hall, and more

Finally, several major venues went cash-only amid the outage. According to The Globe and Mail, Toronto’s Scotiabank Arena and Massey Hall tweeted notices for attendees to pre-print tickets and to arrive early because “delays are expected.”

Similarly, shopping malls like Yorkdale and Square One said some stores wouldn’t open due to the outage.