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Oxio warns of internet slowdowns for Ontario customers due to July 8 Rogers outage

Independent internet service provider (ISP) Oxio reached out to its Ontario customers via email Saturday to warn of potential slowdowns during peak hours (between 8pm and 10pm). Moreover, it requested customers try to not perform speed tests as it will “clog up the lines” and cause more slowdowns.

You can read a longer explanation below if you’re interested in the details of the internet in Canada, but the short version of what’s going on is Oxio needed a capacity increase from Rogers because of its growing customer base. Oxio requested that increase, but didn’t get it because of the July 8th outage, and is now stuck waiting for Rogers to resume performing network changes to get the increase it needs.

Oxio emailed customers to explain what was going on because it “promised to be up front” about everything. The main takeaways from the email include that Oxio is working on the problem with Rogers and the Competitive Network Operators of Canada (CNOC) since other ISPs might be affected. Another takeaway is that Ontario customers (disclosure, I am one) might experience slowdowns because of this.

Rogers halted network changes, pushing back Oxio’s capacity increase

A segment of the Oxio email explaining what’s going on with Rogers.

Oxio says that its growing customer base requires an increase in capacity in Ontario, and since Oxio runs on Rogers in the province, it needs to purchase capacity from Rogers. However, issues related to the July 8th Rogers outage — called ‘Red Friday’ by some — resulted in Oxio not getting the capacity increase that it needed.

In the email, Oxio explained that it submitted a request to Rogers to increase capacity on June 22nd, and the change was supposed to go into effect on July 7th. Oxio said Rogers didn’t increase capacity when it was supposed to (apparently, “this is pretty normal” with Rogers). However, unlike previous capacity increases, Oxio says Rogers implemented a “company-wide change embargo” after Red Friday.

Again, Oxio says this is pretty normal after an outage since network changes are responsible for most problems. Rogers has already detailed how its maintenance update caused a cascading problem through its core network that ultimately took out wireline, wireless, and several other services nationwide.

The embargo was set to end on July 18th. However, Rogers extended it several times, leaving Oxio with no scheduled date for the capacity increase:

“Since then, Rogers has extended their change embargo twice. The first time until July 25, 2022 and, recently, again for an indeterminate period, which means there’s no scheduled date to complete our request for additional capacity.”

Oxio says it’s not “too worried” about the embargo since it hasn’t hit maximum capacity yet. However, the company says its “rapid growth, means [it is] quickly running out of bandwidth,” which could lead to slowdowns at peak times.

Thankfully, it’s not all bad news. Oxio also told customers it hopes “to have all of this sorted before you notice anything.” The company says it’s talking with “the right people at Rogers” and has reached out to the CNOC because it likely isn’t the only other independent ISP impacted by the Rogers embargo.

Ultimately, if you’re with Oxio or another ISP that runs on Rogers’ network, you may want to keep an eye out for potential slowdowns and avoid doing speed tests until this all gets sorted out.

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Separating wireless and wireline networks will cost Rogers $250 million, CEO reveals at committee hearing

Rogers will pay $250 million to separate its wireless and wireline networks.

CEO Tony Staffieri revealed the figure while being questioned by the Standing Committee on Industry and Technology.

MobileSyrup previously reported that the company would separate the two to prevent wireless (such as 5G and LTE) and wireline services (fibre, for example) from going down simultaneously in the event of a future outage.

“We failed to deliver on our promise to be Canada’s most reliable network,” Staffieri told the committee.

The CEO said the company has “been as transparent as we can be” when reporting on the outage. Staffieri pointed to a recent filing the company made to the CRTC, saying, “we want to share all the information on this outage.”

However, Staffieri failed to mention that the document available for public viewing was heavily redacted. Elements describing the specifics of the outage, recovery efforts, and the number of customers impacted in each province were removed.

Further illuminating the trail of disconnect, Staffieri went on to say Canadians have “alternative and they have choice,” when speaking on competition in Canada’s telecom market.

Staffieri said little regarding Rogers’ merger with Shaw, which is waiting on approval from the Competition Bureau and Innovation and Science and Economic Development Canada.

Innovation Minister François-Philippe Champagne appeared before the committee before Staffieri and was also questioned on the Shaw merger. Champagne previously stated regulators will take the outage into consideration when deciding on the merger. He offered little detail beyond this at the hearing, saying his department will examine the merger once an application is submitted.

Champagne further told the committee that he was the one to reach out to Rogers CEO Tony Staffieri and that it should have been the other way around. Champagne was in Tokyo at the time of the outage. The Minister said he contacted Rogers CEO, as well as the CEOs of Bell and Telus. He has instructed Canada’s wireless carriers to create a framework to help each other when network outages occur.

Image credit: Shutterstock

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Rogers making progress on agreement for carriers to switch 911 calls during outage: CEO

Rogers says it’s making “meaningful progress” on an agreement for carriers to automatically switch 911 calls to other networks, weeks after a nationwide outage left customers unable to contact emergency services.

“I believe this is the only responsible way forward and I am personally committed to making it possible for all Canadians,” Tony Staffieri, Rogers CEO, said in a letter to customers.

Staffieri said Rogers will be separating its wireless and internet services, as reported by MobileSyrup, and will invest $10 billion “to focus on reliability.”

Rogers will invest the funds over three years and cover more oversight, testing and greater use of AI.

Staffieri said the company is also working with technology firms to complete a review of their network and learn from the outage that started when a maintenance update caused routers in its network to malfunction.

In a partially-redacted response to the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), the company said competitors reached out to help, but Rogers couldn’t transfer customers as it was unable to access parts of its network, including the centralized user database. Rogers also said its competitors would be unable to handle the sudden traffic volume.

Image credit: Shutterstock

Source: Rogers

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Rogers change in leadership won’t impact plans to separate wireless, wireline traffic

Rogers has replaced Jorge Fernandes as the company’s chief technology and information officer.

Ron McKenzie now fills the role, Rogers’ website outlining the company’s leadership team shows.

Rogers told The Globe and Mail, which first reported the news, that Fernandes is stepping down from the role. “Effective immediately, Ron McKenzie becomes Chief Technology and Information Officer,” Rogers said.

The leadership change comes nearly two weeks after a national outage left many Canadians unable to use their phones and home internet services, among a barrage of other services.

MobileSyrup reported the company plans to separate its wireless and wireline services to prevent a similar outage in the future. At this time, all traffic goes through one core network, and separating them will prevent an outage from taking out both networks simultaneously.

A source familiar with the matter told MobileSyrup Fernandes announced the plans at an all-hands meeting. The leadership changes won’t impact these plans.

The migration will likely happen in the next two years, and the project will take up to 18 months to complete. Rogers will complete the change deep within its network, and customers shouldn’t feel a difference. It’s unclear what the project’s final price tag will be.

Image credit: Shutterstock 

Via: The Globe and Mail 

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The ongoing ramifications of the Rogers outage

The Rogers outage on July 8th left many Canadians at a standstill. While services have resumed, Canadians and government officials aren’t ready to let Rogers slide the outage under the rug. Multiple actions against the company are pending, and the situation is far from resolved.

To help you keep track of everything happening around the outage, MobileSyrup has put together a list of key events and actions that will take place in the coming weeks and months.

The government’s study on the merger

The House of Commons committee on industry (INDU) and technology has voted to study the Rogers outage through at least two meetings before July 30th. The study will examine four things: the cause of the outage, its impact on Canadians, measures to mitigate future disruptions, and ways for companies to keep impacted Canadians notified about outages in a “timely and transparent manner.

The committee will call witnesses from Rogers, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), and innovation Minister François-Philippe Champagne. At the time of writing, the committee did not make public the dates for the two meetings.

Separating wireless and wireline traffic

MobileSyrup reported Rogers plans on separating its wireless and wireline services to prevent one outage from taking down both networks in the future. Currently, all traffic travels through the same core of Rogers’ network. It could take up to 18 months to build the necessary infrastructure, and the migration will likely take place in two years.

Rogers will likely publicly reveal details of this plan in the future.

The CRTC’s deadline

Like the INDU, Canada’s telecom watchdog is additionally questioning Rogers on why the outage happened. The CRTC gave Rogers 10 days to share details and outline measures to prevent a future outage. The letter the CRTC sent to Rogers outlining the details states they received requests to launch a public inquiry, but it doesn’t state that the CRTC is following suit. Rogers has until July 22nd to provide answers.

Class action lawsuit

Law firm LPC Avocat Inc. filed a class action lawsuit on behalf of Quebec resident Arnaud Verdier on July 11th. The suit asks Rogers to pay customers impacted by the outage $400; $200 for Rogers failing to provide service and $200 for “false representations” that Rogers has the most reliable network. The lawsuit also seeks compensation for Canadians who couldn’t complete debit transactions or e-transfers. 

In the meantime, Rogers customers will receive an ounce of financial relief following the company’s decision to credit customers for five days. Notably, critics are saying the action isn’t enough. You can check out the complete list of Rogers flanker brands and resellers offering credits here.

Postponed events

The outage disrupted several different events across the country. The Weeknd had to cancel his July 8th concert at the Rogers Centre, which would have kicked off his ‘After Hours Til Dawn’ stadium tour. The artist will be back on September 22nd for a rescheduled performance, and tickets from the July 8th show will be honoured.

Rogers takeover of Shaw

Before the outage, most of the news coverage surrounding Rogers related to its merger with Shaw in one way or another. While the news cycle has shifted, Minister Champagne is reminding Canadians the two sets of news are very much related. Last week, the Minister said policymakers would be thinking of the outage when considering the takeover. “[It’s] going to be on the mind of the different people who need to make a decision,” Champagne said.

The merger still needs approval from Innovation and Science and Economic Development Canada and the Competition Bureau, which filed to block the merger in May.

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The not-so-easy ways to diversify personal telecom services following the Rogers outage

The July 8th Rogers outage left many Canadians scrambling to access several services. From making calls through mobile phones or landlines, attempting to work remotely, or even using their debit cards, many Canadians and companies using Rogers services were forced offline in a rude awakening.

The outage left many Rogers (and non-Rogers customers) questioning what they could do to avoid a similar situation in the future. MobileSyrup has put together a list of helpful tips below.

But be warned, taking these actions could result in tedious work that may end up costing you more, highlighting the lack of competition and regulation in Canada’s telecommunications market.

Mix and match your services

Mixing service providers up is one of the ways to ensure some services remain active when one company has an outage.

But there are important things to keep in mind here. One is knowing which service providers function independently and don’t rely on larger companies.

“If you’re looking to mix up the services so that you’re protected against all of them going down at once, you should be clear that you’re not actually signing up for companies that are provided by the same owner. They rely on the same network,” Ben Klass, a PhD candidate at Carleton University, said.

For example, companies like TekSavvy and Zoomer Wireless use Rogers services, and customers connected with these companies faced an outage on July 8th. You can check out a list of credits resellers are offering for the outage here.

Beware of flanker brands

A subsection to the last point, make sure you’re not diversifying your services with flanker brands, which are lower-priced brands that larger companies offer that run on the same network.

“Try to ensure that you’re not buying the same services from the same company,” Fenwick Mckelvey, an associate professor of communications at Concordia University, said.

For example, Rogers has Chatr and Fido as flanker brands, Bell has Virgin Plus and Lucky Mobile, and Telus has Koodo and Public Mobile. Purchasing internet from Bell and a phone plan from Virgin Plus doesn’t diversify your services.

Additionally, following the chaos of the July 8th outage, Rogers reportedly plans to split its network, separating wireless and wireline traffic. That should hopefully prevent both from going down at the same time in the future. That could mean it’ll be safe to use Rogers for both your smartphone and home internet in the future, but it’ll be a few years before the separation takes place.

Stay away from incentives

Incentives are great because they often include discounts or specific perks for bundling multiple services with one provider, a positive for Canadians who pay some of the highest telecom bills in the world. But that can cause trouble when a system-wide outage comes into play, as all of the services a provider offers you will be down.

“In Canada, all major companies emphasize bundles in their marketing. They even use techniques like selling a third, less useful service to create the perception of a discount,” Mckelvey explained. “If all these services are run by the same company and converged on the same network, then the customer is more and more dependent on one company.”

Buying your phone or getting one unlocked

To add to the theme of spending more money, another tip is to own your device outright so you can get a new SIM and access service from another provider if one is down. This may be costly for those who buy devices from companies on contracts. But according to Klass, owning your device or having one that’s unlocked will make it easier to access services from another provider.

“You could buy another SIM card and just pop it into your existing device. You might not have the same phone number,” he said, “but having an unlocked phone can make it easier to get those services.” Klass mentions people can only do this if they have the financial means to sign up for a new service and access a SIM card on the spot.

All phones sold in Canada must be unlocked, according to the Wireless Code that was implemented in 2017. That doesn’t mean carriers haven’t found ways to go around this. Rogers, for example, only unlocks phones for active customers or customers who were with the company in the past year and don’t have any outstanding fees.

Customers who bought older phones from the company before the Wireless Code went into effect, and didn’t unlock their phones or have been a customer for the past year, will have to become a Rogers customer to get their device unlocked.

And yes, keeping all of these details in mind is difficult.

“It’s not reasonable to expect your customers to know [these details],” Klass said. “You shouldn’t have to have a degree in engineering to figure out how the internet gets to your house or check your email.”

Image credit: Shutterstock

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Champagne says Rogers outage to be factor in Shaw merger decision

Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada (ISED) Minister François-Philippe Champagne said policymakers would include Rogers’ July 8th service outage when considering the company’s proposed takeover of Shaw Communications.

As the Globe and Mail reports, Champagne told reporters at an event in Calgary on Friday that the outage will “be on the mind of the different people who need to make a decision.”

The proposed $26 billion merger would combine Canada’s two largest cable networks. However, the Competition Bureau is already trying to block the deal over concerns it will lead to poorer service and higher prices, especially for wireless customers. Rogers and Shaw have attempted to ease those concerns by striking an agreement to sell Shaw’s Freedom Mobile to Quebecor, which owns Vidéotron, for $2.85 billion. Friday was the deadline for the companies to reach a definitive agreement.

Moreover, the House of Commons committee on industry and technology adopted a motion on Friday to study the July 8th Rogers outage. The committee plans to review the cause of the outage, its impact on families, consumers and businesses, and look at measures to prevent future outages and ways to provide the public with timely information about outages.

The Globe reports that there will be at least two meetings dedicated to the study before July 30th. The committee plans to invite representatives from Rogers, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), and Champagne to appear.

A Rogers spokesperson told the Globe that the company will work with the committee to “provide details on the cause of the outage and the actions we are taking to enhance the reliability of each of our networks moving forward, including through formal mutual support agreements.”

For more on what caused the Rogers outage, check out MobileSyrup’s in-depth analysis here. Moreover, MobileSyrup detailed company plans revealed at an all-hands meeting Friday to separate wireless and wireline traffic to prevent future outages — you can read about that here.

Source: The Globe and Mail

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Here are the outage credits offered by Rogers flanker brands and resellers

Following the nationwide July 8th Rogers network outage, the company promised it would credit customers the equivalent of two days’ worth of service. Rogers later upped that to a credit for five days’ worth of service.

However, Rogers’ network outage impacted more than just Rogers, so some might be wondering what — if any — credits will come down the pipe from their provider, whether that’s a flanker brand or reseller.

But before we get into it, it’s worth noting that no matter if you subscribe directly to Rogers or get services from another company, be aware of scams related to bill credits. So far, everyone that has offered a credit has said they will apply it automatically. If you get a text message or email asking you to do something to get the credit — like clicking a link — don’t do it.

Anyway, let’s get into it.

Fido

Rogers flanker brand Fido confirmed via its ‘Fido Solutions’ Twitter account that it would automatically credit customers five days’ worth of service following the outage.

Chatr

Similarly, Rogers flanker brand Chatr will offer customers five days’ worth of service as an automatic credit.

TekSavvy

Although TekSavvy resells Rogers internet in some regions, the provider hasn’t detailed plans to credit customers yet. When reached by MobileSyrup, TekSavvy indicated it didn’t have enough information about the situation to comment.

Oxio

In an email to customers (disclosure, I am one), Oxio said it would automatically apply a two-day pro-rated credit to customer bills starting on invoices dated after July 13th.

So far, this is just a short list of providers. MobileSyrup has reached out to some others but did not receive answers ahead of publication — the story will be updated with additional information as it becomes available. If you’ve heard from a provider about credits related to the Rogers outage, let us know down below.

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Why the Rogers outage was so bad, and how to prevent the next one

Canadians didn’t know how good they had it until it was gone.

Millions woke up on the morning of July 8th to find they had no internet. Their wireless service didn’t work. Debit transactions at stores failed. E-transfers didn’t go through. Canadians couldn’t reach 9-1-1. Government services reported disruptions because phone lines were down.

Roughly 36 hours later, Rogers CEO and president Tony Staffieri publicly revealed the cause of the outage: a maintenance update in the company’s core network. The update caused “some of [Rogers’] routers to malfunction” on July 8th.

Over 48 hours later, with some customers still reporting issues despite Rogers claiming it restored the “vast majority” of service, calls for an investigation were ringing loud. On July 11th, Innovation, Science and Industry Minister Francois-Phillipe Champagne met with the heads of Canada’s major telecom companies and gave them 60 days to “improve the resiliency and reliability” of networks and to reach agreements on emergency roaming, mutual assistance during outages, and a communications protocol to provide better information to the public and authorities amid telecommunications emergencies.

Champagne also promised a CRTC investigation into the outage, and on July 12th, the commission ordered Rogers to answer questions about what happened within ten days.

On the surface, it seems simple. There was a problem, and the government told telecom companies to work together to ensure it didn’t happen again.

But it’s never that simple. To come up with a solution, you need to understand the problem — this one runs deep, and well beyond Rogers.

All-in on all-IP

To start, we need to understand how Rogers’ network operates — you’ll need to bear with me through this, as it’s a bit of a slog (I promise it’s worth it). MobileSyrup has come to understand that Rogers is an all-IP (internet protocol) network, which effectively means the traffic doesn’t matter — it all goes through the same network.

A source familiar with networks, and who asked not to be named, explained all-IP as like an FM radio. Unlike typical radio, where users need to tune in to different stations, an all-IP station has every station in one tuning. In the case of Rogers, all traffic (telephony, wired, etc.) goes through the same core network.

To be clear, there isn’t anything necessarily wrong with all-IP. Telecom networks have moved in this direction over the last several years, enabling some innovations. However, there are vulnerabilities too — for example, a whole-network outage like what we saw on July 8th.

“Look, an all-IP network I don’t think is necessarily a bad thing if it’s implemented in a resilient way,” explained Ian Rae in an interview with MobileSyrup. Rae, the founder and CEO of CloudOps, has worked in the tech industry for about 25 years. Back in 2000, Rae was part of a startup that was virtualizing network access for internet companies.

“I am very much at the intersection of telecommunications and networking, and what we now call cloud computing,” Rae said.

Rogers isn’t one of Rae’s customers, so he isn’t “intimately familiar” with the company’s network — and it’s also one of the reasons he was able to speak with MobileSyrup. Rae was able to offer some high-level insight into Canadian telecom architecture.

“The thing that’s interesting about [the outage] to me is that [Rogers] already shared that this is in their core network,” Rae said. “So what’s a core network? This is where a lot of the internal handling of traffic and security policies, how services get integrated together, all this magic happens on the core network.”

According to Rae, components running at the edge of the network, like cell towers, get connected back to the core network through backhaul. Traffic runs through this system and ends up at the ultimate destination.

Tracing the traffic

Part of that journey involves what our source called the “basic level of the internet,” comprised of big, expensive gateway nodes, or routers, that handle all the traffic and transfer it out from Rogers’ network into the wider internet. An important note here: the core difference between a router and a gateway is that gateways regulate traffic between dissimilar networks, while routers handle similar networks. In other words, a router could be considered a gateway, but a gateway can’t always be considered a router.

This is where we get into the meat of what went wrong. As detailed by Cloudflare in a blog post on July 8th, the issue stemmed from Rogers’ routers that handle Border Gateway Protocol (BGP). BGP, according to Cloudflare, allows one network (for example, Rogers) to tell other networks that it exists. The internet is a network of networks, so simply, BGP is how Rogers informs the rest of the networks on the internet of its presence.

We’ll get into BGP more in a moment, but first, it’s worth noting that MobileSyrup understands Bell and Telus operate all-IP networks as well. In other words, both could be vulnerable to similar issues.

But first, to highlight the scope of how traffic runs on Rogers’ network, it’s worth looking at what happened to Rae when Rogers went down. Rae had been on vacation in Rhode Island and was just starting the drive back to Montreal when the outage hit, and Rae lost service.

“One of the reasons for that is that the ability to roam actually does still tie back to the availability of those core networking services back up in Canada,” Rae said.

That’s perhaps one of the best examples of how this system works for people outside the know, and it helps clarify why the Rogers outage was so significant. It wasn’t that phones couldn’t connect to towers. Rogers’ network failure was much more specific, taking down a core piece of the network responsible for directing traffic from Rogers’ network to the rest of the internet.

It’s also key to understanding the issues with 9-1-1 and Rogers customers being unable to call emergency services. As MobileSyrup understands, Canadian telecommunications companies already have network sharing agreements to enable 9-1-1 access in the event of a network outage. In other words, if a Rogers phone can’t connect to Rogers’ towers, it can fall back to other carriers’ towers through local roaming to access the emergency network. If you have cell signal, you can dial 9-1-1.

Given that Rogers’ towers were operating fine, it appears that the emergency fallback didn’t kick in. Further, Iristel president, founder and CEO Samer Bishay said in a statement that Rogers customers could have regained access to 9-1-1 services by removing the SIM card from their device. Typically this isn’t necessary, but because of how Rogers’ network failed, Bishay said removing the SIM would enable the typical fallback routing for emergency calls. Unfortunately, this wasn’t communicated to Canadians during the outage, with some emergency services directing people to find landlines or borrow other, working phones.

Assembling the puzzle pieces

Albert Heinle, co-founder and CTO of Waterloo, Ontario-based CoGuard, shared a deep dive into Rogers’ BGP issues on the CoGuard website. Heinle assembles a few pieces — first, noting what Rogers revealed about an update causing router malfunctions, then pulling in Cloudflare’s information about BGP — and explains that there was likely a scheduled maintenance update on Friday morning, which caused Rogers’ BGP routers to malfunction. That malfunction stopped those routers from communicating to the rest of the internet that Rogers’ network existed. Rae also notes that Rogers may use internal BGP (IBGP) for communication within its own network, which could also potentially be a point of failure.

Both Heinle and Rae referenced Facebook’s October 2021 outage, which was also BGP-related. A small misconfiguration removed the ability of Facebook’s systems to communicate with each other.

The anonymous source described the issue to MobileSyrup as similar to being connected remotely to a computer. If you turn on that computer’s firewall, it cuts off the remote connection, and now you can’t remotely reconnect to turn off that firewall. Then, you have to physically go to that computer and physically connect to turn off the firewall. Of course, it’s never that simple — there’s still the process of figuring out what went wrong, where it went wrong, and how to fix it. Oh, and then actually fixing it!

However, it’s worth acknowledging that there may still be pieces of the puzzle that haven’t been revealed. Rogers is due to answer CRTC’s questions about the outage on July 22nd, and new information will likely be revealed there. That said, it seems enough of the pieces have been revealed for people to start teasing out ways to prevent this from happening again.

And that brings us to the crux of all this: solutions.

Work together, or else!

It’s important to understand that no solution should be off the table. Everything is worth considering at this point, and every solution has pros and cons. People can argue about what should be done, but first, we should examine what can be done.

So far, the solution that appears to have garnered the biggest headlines is Minister Champagne’s demand that Canada’s telecommunications companies work together and develop agreements for mutual assistance, emergency roaming, and better communication about outages.

The latter point is critically important, especially given that Rogers’ existing solutions for communicating outages almost completed failed to do that effectively. The ‘@RogersHelps’ Twitter account shared its first update over four hours into the outage on July 8th. Prior to that, customers were directed to visit either a community forum page that was supposed to offer information about ongoing outages — but didn’t — or a Rogers support page where customers could access a chatbot to get information about outages. During the early hours of the outage, that chatbot appeared to have difficulties working correctly.

The other two demands are more difficult. Emergency roaming agreements didn’t work during the July 8th outage, so revamping that system could help. However, it’s currently unclear how best to do that, considering that the way Rogers’ network failed prevented traffic from routing to fallback measures.

As for mutual assistance, while it would be good to allow phones to effectively “hop” between available networks, our source explained that this would essentially open a back door into the network that competitors can use. And, as is so often pointed out with government attempts to gain access to encryption, if a backdoor exists, it becomes a target for exploitation. That could come from anywhere — governments, hackers, competitors. It seems impossible — how do you open the core of your network to prevent outages without putting the whole network at risk?

Moreover, Rae said that although he liked the idea of Champagne’s mutual assistance, he worried that such an agreement could further hamper efforts to increase competition and bring in new players.

Update the way you update

Heinle’s analysis includes a close examination of Rogers’ own proposed solutions. On July 9th, Rogers outlined three parts of its action plan regarding the outage, which included analyzing the root cause of the outage and implementing redundancy and any other necessary changes.

Redundancy can be best thought of as increasing the amount of infrastructure to create fallbacks. In the case of Rogers’ outage, that could be increasing the number of routers. MobileSyrup’s source suggested adding specialized routers to handle emergency traffic, if such a system doesn’t already exist. However, Heinle notes redundancy isn’t the issue. The update structure is.

Rogers’ outage started with a faulty update, which means increasing the number of routers won’t solve the problem – if they all receive a faulty update, they all break. So, Rogers should focus on updating the way it handles updates to mitigate the potential for outages of this magnitude.

“These maintenance activities are generally pretty typical in routine,” said Rae. “You’re going to have a change management plan, you’re going to have an approval process, you’re going to have a backout plan. It doesn’t sound like, from what [Rogers] is saying, that it was a major change architecturally… those tend to be much riskier activities.”

Both Rae and Heinle posed the question of what Rogers’ risk management was with the update. Heinle suspects a rollback wasn’t possible given that Rogers said it disconnected impacted equipment. Both also questioned the “blast radius” of the outage — why didn’t Rogers stage the update to catch any potential issues on a smaller scale before it impacted the entire network? And if Rogers did stage the update, how did the issue slip through? We may not know these answers until we hear them from Rogers in the coming days.

A long road ahead

Ultimately, Rogers will need to review its internal update policies and develop solutions to fix possible failure points. Ideas shared with MobileSyrup include reviewing why updates need to be applied, and how those updates spread through the company’s network. Can Rogers contain updates to specific areas of the network for testing before a broader release? The approval process for updates should also be considered.

Rogers may examine whether it should implement check systems to warn of potential issues and prevent wide rollouts of broken updates. Maybe the company could implement (or improve an existing) system for managing update rollbacks when something goes wrong. Maybe more frequent, smaller updates instead of singular, major updates is the key.

Even better? A combination of everything. No solution should be off the table, including potentially expensive options — for example, the company’s consideration of splitting the wireless and wireline networks. That would be a huge expense given how the network currently works.

Moreover, while Rogers carries significant blame, no critical service in Canada — or anywhere — should be wholly dependent on a single telecom company.

“The fact that they went down is something that I’m shocked that everybody’s so shocked about it,” said Rae. “How is it that we have banks and other services that are mission-critical, and they depend entirely on the ability of a single telco provider to provide services? That is [an] unacceptable risk from my perspective.”

Rae acknowledges that that thought line only goes so far. It works for major services like Interac — which announced it would add a supplier to increase redundancy following the Rogers outage. For regular customers and small businesses, it may not make sense to have multiple internet services. Expense aside, many companies — including Rogers — incentivize customers to bundle services and get internet, wireless, TV, and more from one company.

In all of this, it’s easy to forget that Rogers’ employees were also affected. Like everyone else, employees couldn’t access services, couldn’t make payments, and couldn’t call 9-1-1. Unfortunately, many will likely be on the receiving end of vitriol from customers frustrated with how the company handled the outage.

So what can Rogers do to prevent a future outage? A lot. What should it do? That’s up for debate. What will it do? We don’t know yet. Rogers made it clear on the call with Champagne that it wants to work with Bell and Telus on this because what happened to Rogers could happen to them.

What will that mean for Canadians? We’ll have to wait and see.

With files from Douglas Soltys.

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Pornhub’s traffic dropped nearly 20 percent due to Rogers outage

Montreal-based Pornhub says it saw a nearly 20 percent drop in traffic thanks to the July 8th Rogers outage, falling in line with previous estimates that the outage took out roughly a quarter of the country’s internet traffic.

In a report from Pornhub (that link is SFW!), the company says it started to see traffic drop almost immediately after the outage began. By 7am ET, hourly traffic to Pornhub was down 19 percent compared to the same hour on an average day. Moreover, traffic remained below average for the rest of the day, including another 19 percent drop in the early evening.

Interestingly, Pornhub said traffic returned to average levels early Saturday morning, but dropped again throughout the day.

The company noted that 90 percent of Canada’s traffic to Pornhub comes from mobile phones, so it also shared a comparison of mobile and desktop traffic. The latter saw a larger drop of 21 percent in the late afternoon on July 8th.

Finally, Pornhub compared the impacts on Canadian provinces. New Brunswick saw the most immediate drop, falling 49 percent by 6am. Manitoba had the biggest drop in traffic, falling 65 percent by 11am. It also didn’t see the same recovery on Saturday that most provinces did.

Ontario’s traffic dropped as low as 38 percent at 4pm on Friday. At that time, Nova Scotia’s traffic was down 35 percent and Quebec’s was down 21 percent.

Pornhub says it determined percent changes in traffic by comparing the July 8th traffic to average levels of the same day of the week, and the same hour of the day, from the two previous weeks.

Source: Pornhub Insights (SFW)