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Google Apologizes for Latest Gmail Outage
Google Apologizes for Latest Gmail Outage

By Adam Dickter
December 11, 2012 10:42AM

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"The shift toward embracing cloud-like services such as Gmail often happens without much consideration of its long-term implications for critical communications functions," said analyst Charles King. "Will Google Drive eventually crash? Probably....The trick lies in determining how you can garner the benefits of that service while also mitigating the risk."
 



For the third time in five months, potentially millions of Gmail users were unable to access their accounts in some parts of the world due to an unexplained outage. The e-mail blackout occurred about 2 p.m. EST Monday.

According to some published reports the outage also affected other Google services such as Google Drive, the new cloud Relevant Products/Services-based storage system, Google Docs and Google Play, the mobile Relevant Products/Services apps Relevant Products/Services and content store.

Google did not acknowledge the issue on its own official blog but added its symbol for "service disruption" with Monday's date on the dashboard for Google Apps under Google Mail, Google Drive and Admin control panel/ABI.

Sorry About That

In a later statement published by some media, Google said "we are currently experiencing an issue with some Google services. For anyone who is affected we apologize for any inconvenience you may be experiencing."

Using a New York-based account on Monday we experienced no issues with Gmail, but sporadic reports suggested an authentication issue, particularly when used with Google's Chrome browser.

According to October figures from research firm comScore, Gmail is the world's top e-mail provider, with 287,913,000 unique visitors that month, compared with 286,238,000 for Microsoft Relevant Products/Services's once dominant Hotmail and 281,722,000 for Yahoo! Mail. The figures were for worldwide users.

"Google's service has become so broadly and commonly used -- partly due to the success of Android phones -- that any problem becomes immediately, often overly amplified," said Charles King, principal analyst at Pund-IT.

Could frequent outages hurt Gmail's market share?

"Over time, I don't see the situation changing much -- though it could worsen if continuing growth results in more outages," King told us. "However, I doubt it will materially impact the company's success or position in this market."

He noted that users of e-mail as opposed to texting, instant messaging or other options tend to be older than the "youthful, free-spending consumers sought after by most vendors." And anyway, how much can people complain about kinks in a free service?

But losing access to e-mail seems less of a serious issue than the potential loss of documents, photos or other data Relevant Products/Services placed in the trust of Google via Drive.

Backing Up Is Essential

"The shift toward embracing cloud-like services such as Gmail often happens without much consideration of its long-term implications for critical communications functions (like e-mail)," King said. "Will Google Drive eventually crash? Probably -- that's the nature of the IT beast. The trick lies in determining how you can garner the benefits of that service while also mitigating the risk."

King added that in a world of increasingly multi-dimensional digital communication, its a mistake for users to entrust communication to a single technology, provider or outlet. "That way lies almost certain -- eventually, anyway -- failure."
 

Based on your interest in this article, here's something that may be of interest to you also:

Recommended Reading: Search & Destroy: Why You Can't Trust Google Inc. Synopsis: This is the other side of the Google story. In Search & Destroy, Google expert Scott Cleland, shows that the world's most powerful company is not who it pretends to be. Google pretends to be a harmless lamb, but chose a full-size model of a Tyrannosaurus Rex as its mascot. Beware the T-Rex in sheep's clothing.

Tell Us What You Think
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Posted: 2012-12-13 @ 7:31am PT
I bought the nexus7 for its bluetooth ability and it was great. Then the update made that feature the worst part of the tablet. My question is: did anybody think to try out bluetooth during the update process (engineers,software developers,etc.)? For at least 30 seconds? …and what does this say about Googles' future updates. I've been a mac user for over 30 years and I have never seen such a blatant oversight such as this in their products. The least I would expect is an acknowledgement of the problem with a small apology and an assurance the problem is being addressed. t.russell



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