Verizon service gradually recovering from significant outage

Verizon has⁤ confirmed that its outage-across-the-us-following-helene-aftermath/” title=”Verizon experiences widespread outage across the US following Helene aftermath”>cell service

​is back online following a massive outage affecting some of its ​mobile⁣ phone customers. ⁣“Verizon engineers have​ fully restored today’s network disruption that ‍impacted some customers. Service has returned to normal levels,” Verizon said in a statement on Monday. The ⁢outage appeared ​to start happening around⁤ 11 am ET, with roughly 100,000 reports⁤ from customers on DownDetector, a site that tracks complaints⁣ about service outages.

Complaints to Verizon’s verified account on X⁣ show that customers have been frustrated by a lack of cell service and an inability‍ to connect to the network. Many Verizon iPhone customers complained that their phones had been stuck in “SOS” mode ⁢Monday morning, allowing only emergency calls via satellite.

Verizon has 114.2 million‌ subscribers in the United States.

Although relatively infrequent,⁣ cell service disruptions ​have ⁢caused some ⁤widespread​ headaches this year. In February‍ AT&T’s ‍network went down for 11 hours, preventing many of its customers across the United States from placing calls, texting or accessing the internet. AT&T said an ⁤initial review of the outage found it ⁢may have been caused ⁣by a technical error introduced by an ⁤update to its network. The network went down again for a⁢ few ⁢hours in June and August.

A telecommunications‌ expert told CNN last month that⁤ network outages are typically caused by a combination of three issues: overloaded networks in major cities, software updates​ that have gone haywire ‍and various technical problems.

But telecom companies are notoriously tight-lipped about the reasons for ⁢their outages. So if networks are down, particularly for just a few hours at a time, it’s unlikely the cell service providers will say much about ⁢what went wrong.

That can be doubly ⁢frustrating for customers, many of whom rely on the networks for a living including ride-share drivers.They also allow people to access emergency‌ services like⁤ 911 on-the-go.And they have connected the world to friends,family and colleagues no matter‍ where they are.The Federal Communications ⁢Commission said Monday afternoon in post on Xthat ⁣it ⁤was “aware ofa Verizon outage impactingcustomersin parts ofthe country,”anditwas investigatingthecauseand scopeofthedistruption.

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