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T-Mobile down: Carrier says that calling and texting have been restored after hours of outages


T-Mobile was having nationwide issues Monday. 


Graphic by Pixabay/Illustration by CNET

If your T-Mobile service was having issues on Monday, you were not alone. The third-largest wireless carrier was having widespread issues around the country impacting the ability to make calls and send text messages starting shortly after noon ET. 

After spending over 12 hours offline, at 1:03 a.m. ET Tuesday morning Neville Ray, T-Mobile’s president of technology, tweeted that texting and calling were once again working. 

Users across the country took to Twitter to note the outage, with T-Mobile and #TMobiledown rising to the top spot on the site’s US Trending Topics for several hours Monday. The main issue appears to be with calls and texts, with users saying that data was working normally. 

After speculation throughout the day blamed the outage on a network configuration gone bad or a Distributed Denial-of-Service (or DDoS) attack, T-Mobile CEO Mike Sievert wrote in a blog post late Monday night that the outage was caused by an “IP traffic related issue that has created significant capacity issues in the network core” throughout the day. 

T-Mobile confirmed to CNET that the issue was not a DDoS attack. 

“I can assure you that we have hundreds of our engineers and vendor partner staff working to resolve this issue,” he continues, adding that “our team will be working through the night as needed to get the network fully operational.”

Ray acknowledged in a tweet at 4:18 p.m. ET Monday that the carrier was having an outage and said that the carrier “hopes to have this fixed shortly.” 

In a tweet sent shortly after 6 p.m. ET, Ray said the carrier was still working to fix calls and texts, while recommending that users use apps like FaceTime, WhatsApp and iMessage to communicate. In his post, Sievert echoed that recommendation. 

Those apps, unlike traditional SMS text messages or voice calls, send messages and calls through the data side of the network which is still operational. 

In tests on Monday afternoon, T-Mobile’s data services appeared to be working normally in northern New Jersey, though I was unable to send text messages and had issues making calls on a OnePlus 8 5G. 

A CNET editor in New York City was able to send texts and iMessage using an iPhone, but calls were not working on either device. An editor in the San Francisco Bay Area noted that calls were not working over Google Fi, the cell phone service offered by Google that relies on T-Mobile, Sprint and U.S. Cellular’s respective networks. Data and texts over Fi, however, was working. 

In addition to Google Fi, T-Mobile is the underlying network providing service for several other carriers such as its Metro prepaid brand as well as for Mint Mobile and Simple Mobile.  

In tests early Tuesday, the OnePlus 8 5G in New Jersey was able to make and receive calls and text messages as well as browse the web and open videos on YouTube over 5G.   

Downdetector.com, a site where users can report outages, noted issues with all major wireless carriers — AT&T, Verizon, T-Mobile and Sprint.

AT&T and Verizon each said that their respective networks were operating normally and without issues. Tests in northern New Jersey on AT&T and Verizon phones showed no issues with calls, texts or data except when trying to text or call a T-Mobile phone.  

“Verizon’s network is performing well. We’re aware that another carrier is having network issues,” a Verizon spokeswoman told CNET in a statement. “Calls to and from that carrier may receive an error message.” 

The company also took issue with Downdetector’s spreading that its network is having outages. “Sites such as Downdetector.com utilize limited crowdsourced data drawn from sample social posts which are often statistically insignificant or factually incorrect,” the spokeswoman said. 

“A lot of factors can contribute to a false report on a third-party website,” adding that by simply aggregating this data “the result can be faulty reports of network performance interruptions causing wide-spread miscommunication for wireless users.”

Sprint, which is now owned by T-Mobile, did not respond to a request for comment.  





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