Orange experienced a blanket blackout of its service in Spain today, preventing calls from other companies’ phones, a relatively unusual incident just a week after the X (formerly Twitter) service.
Vodafone secured EL ESPAÑOL – El Androide Libre that our services work properly without any inconvenience.
Downdetector started receiving thousands of reports from users about problems with Orangewith the foul being aimed at calls that cannot be linked to the movements of other operators.
At 13:05 on the Downdetector page, where you can find the contact person for checking fouls on digital platforms, register a maximum of 3,423 reports.
Orange was quick to say that they were working on a solution to the problem that was blocking calls to the movement of users with different operators, such as Movistar or the aforementioned Vodafone.
The company reported that the foul was widespread in Spain resolver in approximately 20 minutes.
And so it was, sir areredor de las 1:11 p.m calls to other operators’ movements were stable, allowing service to return to normal.
In our tests in EL ESPAÑOL – The Free Android, when you try to call another mobile, the call is simply short-circuited.
Of course, Orange effectively dealt with a problem that at first seemed likely to be more serious, taking credit for its quick response.
Although these types of outages are not common, they can occur and usually do not affect the entire country; operators are usually treated fairly.
Unlike what happened in previous months with Cloudflare or AWS of Amazon, leading to paralyzing cases on the Internet.
Cloudflare tested two major incidents in a short period between November and December that affected essential services and ensured that if this system failed, platforms like LinkedIn or online games like Fortnite would be disrupted.
The situation was so serious that after the first incident on November 18, the problems were repeated on December 5.

Leave a Reply