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BT Broadband and Plusnet customers knocked offline by power issues BT Broadband and Plusnet down for thousands of customers
(35 minutes later)
Power issues have caused outage to BT’s broadband and Plusnet services leaving thousands of users struggling to access the internet.Power issues have caused outage to BT’s broadband and Plusnet services leaving thousands of users struggling to access the internet.
The UK’s biggest internet service provider (ISP) with around 10 million customers, reported outages in several areas at around 9am. BT said it was aware and working on a fix at 9.10am, but is facing outcry on social media as users vent their frustration.The UK’s biggest internet service provider (ISP) with around 10 million customers, reported outages in several areas at around 9am. BT said it was aware and working on a fix at 9.10am, but is facing outcry on social media as users vent their frustration.
A BT spokesperson said: “We’re sorry that some BT and Plusnet customers are experiencing problems accessing some internet services this morning. This is due to power issues at one of our internet peering partners’ sites in London. Engineers are working to fix things as fast as possible.”A BT spokesperson said: “We’re sorry that some BT and Plusnet customers are experiencing problems accessing some internet services this morning. This is due to power issues at one of our internet peering partners’ sites in London. Engineers are working to fix things as fast as possible.”
BT said the problems appeared to be mainly affecting customers in London and the south-east, but thousands of reports from users to the Down Detector website placed issues in Birmingham, Manchester, Sheffield, Liverpool, Milton Keynes, Leeds, Bristol, Nottingham and Leicester.BT said the problems appeared to be mainly affecting customers in London and the south-east, but thousands of reports from users to the Down Detector website placed issues in Birmingham, Manchester, Sheffield, Liverpool, Milton Keynes, Leeds, Bristol, Nottingham and Leicester.
Related: Kipper Williams on BT OpenreachRelated: Kipper Williams on BT Openreach
The ISPs service status page indicates it has detected issues across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. Some users have suggested that the problem is linked to BT’s Domain Name System (DNS), which translates URLs such as theguardian.com into Internet Protocol (IP) addresses so that a computer can connect to a server and display a website.The ISPs service status page indicates it has detected issues across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. Some users have suggested that the problem is linked to BT’s Domain Name System (DNS), which translates URLs such as theguardian.com into Internet Protocol (IP) addresses so that a computer can connect to a server and display a website.
Changing your DNS settings to a third-party, such as Google’s public DNS, could solve the issue.Changing your DNS settings to a third-party, such as Google’s public DNS, could solve the issue.
The internet outage comes a day after BT was warned that it must “put its house in order” by MPs or face a break-up after failing to invest potentially hundreds of millions of pounds a year in its network arm Openreach. However, BT said on Tuesday that it had invested more than £1bn a year in its infrastructure and that it was improving service levels. Openreach currently provides over 25m telecoms lines across the UK between the company’s exchanges and homes and businesses.The internet outage comes a day after BT was warned that it must “put its house in order” by MPs or face a break-up after failing to invest potentially hundreds of millions of pounds a year in its network arm Openreach. However, BT said on Tuesday that it had invested more than £1bn a year in its infrastructure and that it was improving service levels. Openreach currently provides over 25m telecoms lines across the UK between the company’s exchanges and homes and businesses.
The UK’s telecoms regulator Ofcom is due to make a decision on whether Openreach, which provides internet services for competing ISPs such as TalkTalk and Sky, should be spun off from the rest of BT.The UK’s telecoms regulator Ofcom is due to make a decision on whether Openreach, which provides internet services for competing ISPs such as TalkTalk and Sky, should be spun off from the rest of BT.