Facebook accused of shutting down its platform to draw away attention from whistleblower's claim

Facebook accused of shutting down its platform to draw away attention from whistleblower's claim

Facebook has been accused of being behind the worldwide outage on its platform which lasted for more than 6 hours.

Recall that the global outage which began around 4:30pm, left Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp not working for hours.

"Damage control ahead of Frances Hauge's whistleblower testimony before Congress tomorrow?" one Twitter user wrote.

Another said: "Interesting that Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp are all down on the day Facebook whistleblower, Frances Haugen, testifies before Congress..."

A third person tweeted: "Facebook and Instagram are both down worldwide one day after a damning '60 Minutes' segment that featured former Facebook product manager Frances Haugen taking the company's awfulness to task."

Facebook accused of shutting down its platform to draw away attention from whistleblower's claim

Facebook accused of shutting down its platform to draw away attention from whistleblower's claim

The outage occurred after former Facebook product manager, Frances Haugen went public on Sunday October 3 and accused the social media platform of continuously prioritizing profit instead of combatting hate speech and misinformation.

Haugen publicly revealed herself as the Facebook whistleblower on Sunday, October 3, 2021, during an interview with 60 Minutes. On the show, she accused her former employer of promoting hate speech in order to make a profit and admitted to leaking Facebook documents to The Wall Street Journal.

One of the internal Facebook research documents leaked by Haugen states: "We have evidence from a variety of sources that hate speech, divisive political speech, and misinformation on Facebook and the family of apps are affecting societies around the world."

Haugen told 60 Minutes host Scott Pelley: "It's paying for its profits with our safety." She is also scheduled to testify in front of the Senate committee on October 5.

Facebook accused of shutting down its platform to draw away attention from whistleblower's claim

As the conspiracy theory went viral yesterday,  Facebook Chief's Technology Officer offered his "sincere apologies" to all who were affected by the outages.

"We are experiencing networking issues and teams are working as fast as possible to debug and restore as fast as possible," he tweeted hours before the misfortuned apps slowly started working again.

Instagram head Adam Mosseri also tweeted that it "feels like a snow day."

Other social media users also suspected that Facebook, WhatsApp and Instagram might have been hacked.

One person shared a spoof ad on placing the domain up for sale for a relatively paltry $8billion with the words "inquiry now and Facebook could be yours."

Doug Madory, director of internet analysis for Kentik Inc, a network monitoring and intelligence company, wrote;

"This is epic. The last major internet outage, which knocked many of the world's top websites offline in June, lasted less than an hour.

"The stricken content-delivery company in that case, Fastly, blamed it on a software bug triggered by a customer who changed a setting."

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