Hot topics close

UK government homepage knocked offline by Fastly glitch

UK government homepage knocked offline by Fastly glitch
The homepage of the U.K. government was among websites affected early Tuesday by an outage at content delivery network Fastly. Gov.uk was unavailable to some users for more than an hour, along with those of major news organizations including the New York
Written by John Hewitt Jones Jun 8, 2021 | FEDSCOOP

The homepage of the U.K. government was among websites affected early Tuesday by an outage at content delivery network Fastly.

Gov.uk was unavailable to some users for more than an hour, along with those of major news organizations including the New York Times, Bloomberg, and the Financial Times.

Content delivery networks are a key part of the global internet infrastructure and provide servers that improve the performance and availability of web services to users in different locations. Media content is often cached at a CDN server so that it doesn’t have to be fetched on the original server every time a user loads a web page.

As of 9:25 am eastern time, a Fastly spokesperson said the company had identified and disabled a service configuration that triggered disruptions across local access points of its networks.

“Our global network is coming back online,” said the spokesperson.

Commenting on the outage, Matt McDermott, a senior officer at technology policy consultancy Access Partnership, said the incident served as a reminder that government agencies should have a rapid response plan in place for dealing with such outages.

“Organizations and government bodies need to look at implementing the steps that look to assess, stabilize, improve and monitor to ensure this issue do not pose further problems in the future,” he said. “Assessment is needed to determine the server’s bottleneck then stabilizing the issue with implementation of quick fixes will mitigate impact to broader stakeholders and users.”

Speaking with FedScoop, McDermott said that depending on the nature of the issue, automated early warning systems can allow serious cyber incidents to be averted.

“Even just a few minutes’ additional warning of a coming outage can help to preserve critical services. In these situations, it becomes very difficult to keep up everything, but emergency capacity can be used to protect key assets,” he said.

A spokesperson for the U.K. government’s digital service said: “We are aware of the issues with gov.uk which means that users cannot currently access the site. This is a wider issue affecting a number of other websites. We are investigating this as a matter of urgency.”

-In this Story- Cybersecurity, Technology
Similar shots
News Archive
  • Army of the Dead
    Army of the Dead
    Zack Snyder, Netflix Spent Millions Adding Tig Notaro to ‘Army of the Dead’
    21 May 2021
    1
  • Murph' workout
    Murph' workout
    ‘Murph Challenge’: Why are people doing it on Memorial Day?
    31 May 2021
    1
  • UFC 301
    UFC 301
    Main Card Results UFC 301: Pantoja vs Erceg
    4 May 2024
    8
  • Aunt Jemima
    Aunt Jemima
    Aunt Jemima announces new name, removes 'racial stereotypes' from product
    10 Feb 2021
    6
  • Anthony Joshua
    Anthony Joshua
    Boxing: Joshua beats Wallin as Parker outpoints Wilder in Riyadh
    24 Dec 2023
    12
This week's most popular shots