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Signal Back After 24 Hours of Outages Caused by Surging Traffic (androidauthority.com) 36

"After experiencing technical difficulties Friday, the Signal messaging app appears to be back up and running," reports the Verge: The company tweeted Saturday night that it was "back," although added that some users may still see error messages in their chats. The company didn't explain what caused the outage.

For users still seeing error messages in their chats — which the company said was a "side effect" of the outage that began around 11:30AM ET Friday — Signal tweeted that those messages do not affect security, rather that you may have missed a message from another user. This will be fixed in the next app updates, the company said...

During the outage, the Signal tweeted that it was "working as quickly as possible to bring additional capacity online to handle peak traffic levels."

A headline at Android Authority suggests a theory about what caused the outage: "Mass exodus from WhatsApp causes Signal servers to buckle under pressure."

"Although we aren't certain why this specific outage occurred," they write, "Signal has made it clear that it is seeing a huge influx of new users. The surge in adoption is due in no small part to people running away from WhatsApp after that Facebook-owned service updated its privacy policy."
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Signal Back After 24 Hours of Outages Caused by Surging Traffic

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  • by know-nothing cunt ( 6546228 ) on Sunday January 17, 2021 @02:36PM (#60955568)

    Why didn't they Signal? Seems like an admission of defeat.

    • Re:They Tweeted? (Score:4, Informative)

      by Snard ( 61584 ) <mike.shawaluk@ g m a i l .com> on Sunday January 17, 2021 @02:44PM (#60955606) Homepage
      Your nickname says it all. Signal is a private messaging app, not a social media "send to many" platform.
      • Your nickname says it all.

        I'm glad you caught that.

      • Well, actually, . . .
        They could make a group and ask every user who installs or updates Signal to join it. It would require a new type of group though, where you can't look up people or make phone calls or the like, to actually be acceptable.
        Telegram does exactly that Mostly possible due to their shitty security.
        So you are both right and wrong.

    • It seems a bit disconcerting that a global secure messaging app used by journalists, human rights activists, dissidents, etc, can be taken out by some centralised point of failure in the US(?), a country that's not exactly a beacon of freedom to the world. I couldn't get a message to someone a few km away because of this outage in a location 10,000km away despite Signal using P2P comms which should be highly fault-tolerant. What happens the next time when some US government agency decides to deliberately
  • Just plug in some AWS servers to help with the load.
    • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Bezos will ban it soon anyway. People might be saying unapproved things on Signal.

    • Because Amazon definitely wouldn't comply with a FISA warrant that would compromise security without notifying Signal, right?

      • Amazon can't see anything if everything is end-to-end encrypted, which is the main selling point of Signal. They could collect metadata, but that's about it.

        • No, actually they could not even collect metadata. Moxie has written extensively about that, and there are some very clever tricks in there. Many of them groundbreaking.
          Last time I checked, being tied to a phone number was the only thing left. But eliminating that is almost completely done. (Hence requiring a password when you restore an account.)
          And even with that phone number, it is both much less leaking than you think and if you use your phone OS's regular push service, that service knows you number any

          • Reading a bit more on this topic, the term "metadata" seems to be applied a bit more broadly than I meant, such as internal routing information. Impressively, Signal has even gone to lengths to minimize the ability to read even this information. So by that apparently more common definition, you're absolutely correct.

    • Sell it to facehook for $100 billion dollaarr
    • Well, AWS has a new bunch of unused servers.

  • by UnknowingFool ( 672806 ) on Sunday January 17, 2021 @02:44PM (#60955610)
    The admin unplugged his coffee maker [purpurhain.de] and plugged the server back in.
  • I call lies.

  • by PPH ( 736903 ) on Sunday January 17, 2021 @05:35PM (#60956272)

    The NSA got a bit behind in decrypting your traffic.

  • He mentioned Signal in one of his famous tweets, and everybody trying to get rid of Messenger's spying scheme, are looking for alternatives. Or maybe it's the Russians or the Chineses trying to brute-force passwords ???
  • It shouldn't be possible for signal to go down.

  • DDos, given today's unstable political climate.

    If that's true, one has to wonder why this would be covered up.

  • No interruption of Signal here. Perhaps the inability to connect was limited to new users? I've been on Signal for 3 years or so.

  • Signal's centralized approach is, at best, lazy engineering. I miss the days when federated protocols were the default approach on the Internet.

  • I do not allow Signal to see my iPhone contacts' list
    If someone contacts me via signal with their name, then my iPhone app shows me their name. If someone contacts me via Signal only with a phone number, I CANNOT add/edit the person's name in Signal without Signal first wanting to connect to my address book.
    Why the F*** does Signal need access to my address book to change a contact's alias? I see this as invasive and malicious.
    Even Skype years ago, and ICQ in the 1990s let me change a contact's alias ins

An Ada exception is when a routine gets in trouble and says 'Beam me up, Scotty'.

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