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Meta-owned Facebook, Messenger and Instagram experienced worldwide outages Tuesday, with more than half a million users unable to access the social media apps in one of the tech giants largest glitches in years.

Other major social media apps, including TikTok, Snapchat and Googles YouTube video platform, also appeared to suffer service issues on a smaller scale, according to DownDetector, a site that tracks web outage reports.

The outages — reported across Europe and Asia as well as the US — began around 10:20 a.m. ET. The Meta-owned apps were mostly back online as of 2 p.m. ET. All other apps were working by this afternoon..

“Earlier today, a technical issue caused people to have difficulty accessing some of our services,” Meta spokesperson Andy Stone wrote on his X account.

“We resolved the issue as quickly as possible for everyone who was impacted, and we apologize for any inconvenience.”

Earlier on Tuesday, Stone addressed the outages, writing: “We’re aware people are having trouble accessing our services. We are working on this now.”

X users responded to Stone with predictable snark. “Good thing X works to let us know,” wrote one X user.

The social media meltdown occurred ahead of the Super Tuesday presidential primaries in 16 states and one US territory and prompted some online speculation of a potential cyber-attack.

However, a senior official with the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency said it was not aware of any specific election nexus nor any specific malicious cyber activity nexus to the outage, according to Axios.

The Meta app outage was among the longest on record since 2021, when Facebook and Instagram infamously went offline for more than six hours.

Company officials later attributed that incident to an engineering error of our own making that occurred while employees were trying to conduct routine maintenance.

Meta shares fell more than 1.5% in Tuesday trading.

Elon Musk, who acquired Twitter in late 2022 for $44 billion and then renamed it X, posted a meme mocking his social media rival.

pic.twitter.com/VTOACNfb3E

The meme depicts characters from the 2014 animated film “Penguins of Madagascar.” One of the characters, who represents X, is seen being saluted by three others who represent Facebook, Instagram and Threads.

According to Downdetector, there were more than 566,700 reports of Facebook outages before noon on Tuesday.

Of those, 75% of the reported problems had to do with the login.

The site also reported more than 85,000 users encountered problems with Instagram.

Frustrated social media users took to the X platform, where the hashtag #facebookdown was trending.

“Your FB & IG accounts have NOT been hacked, but many users have been reporting that they appears to have been logged out of their accounts and can not currently log back into them,” X user Brian Krassenstein posted.

Krassenstein included a video clip showing him unsuccessfully trying to log in to Facebook.

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Follow live: Kings look to take 3-0 series lead vs. Oilers

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Hagel suspended for Game 3 due to hit on Barkov

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Hagel suspended for Game 3 due to hit on Barkov

Tampa Bay Lightning winger Brandon Hagel was suspended one game by the NHL Department of Player Safety on Friday night for what it labeled “an extremely forceful body check to an unsuspecting opponent” that injured Florida Panthers captain Aleksander Barkov.

Hagel will miss Saturday’s Game 3 in Sunrise, Florida. The Panthers lead the series 2-0.

Around midway through the third period of Thursday’s Game 2, Tampa Bay was on the power play while trailing 1-0. Barkov pressured defenseman Ryan McDonagh deep in the Lightning zone. With the puck clearly past Barkov, Hagel lined him up for a huge hit that sent the Panthers captain to the ice and thumping off the end boards.

A penalty was whistled, and the officials conferred before calling a “five-minute penalty.” After review, Hagel was given a 5-minute major for interference. Barkov left the game with 10:09 remaining in regulation and did not return to the Panthers’ 2-0 win.

Lightning coach Jon Cooper said after the game that he didn’t expect Hagel to receive a major penalty for the hit.

“Refs make the call. I was a little surprised it was a five, but it was,” he said.

The NHL ruled that Hagel’s hit made “some head contact” on Barkov.

“It’s important to note that Barkov is never in possession of the puck on this play and is therefore not eligible to be checked in any manner,” the league said.

In the Friday hearing, held remotely, Hagel argued that he approached the play anticipating that Barkov would play the puck. But the Department of Player Safety said the onus was on Hagel to ensure that Barkov was eligible to be checked. It also determined that the hit had “sufficient force” for supplemental discipline.

It’s Hagel’s first suspension in 375 regular-season and 36 playoff games. He was fined for boarding Florida’s Eetu Luostarinen in May 2022.

The Panthers held an optional skate Friday. Coach Paul Maurice said Barkov “hasn’t been ruled out yet” but “hasn’t been cleared” for Game 3.

“He’s an irreplicable player,” Panthers defenseman Seth Jones said of Barkov. “One of the best centermen in the league. He’s super important to our team.”

The Lightning lose Hagel while they struggle to score in the series; they scored two goals in Game 1 and were shut out in Game 2. Tampa Bay was the highest-scoring team in the regular season (3.56), with Hagel contributing 35 goals and 55 assists in 82 games.

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Goalies Montembeault, Dobes leave Caps-Habs

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Goalies Montembeault, Dobes leave Caps-Habs

The Washington Capitals and Montreal Canadiens lost their starting goalies because of injuries in Game 3 of their first-round series Friday night.

Canadiens starter Sam Montembeault was replaced by rookie Jakub Dobes, who made his playoff debut, in the second period. Capitals starter Logan Thompson left late in the third period after a collision with teammate Dylan Strome.

The Canadiens won 6-3 to cut their series deficit to 2-1.

Montembeault left the crease with 8:21 remaining in the second period and the score tied 2-2. Replays showed him reaching for the back of his left leg after making a save on Capitals defenseman Alex Alexeyev. Montembeault had stopped 11 of 13 shots. For the series, he stopped 58 of 63 shots (.921 save percentage) with a 2.49 goals-against average.

Dobes, 23, was 7-4-3 in 16 games for the Canadiens in the regular season with a .909 save percentage. Dobes had a win over the Capitals on Jan. 10, stopping 15 shots in a 3-2 overtime win.

Thompson was helped from the ice by a trainer and teammates after Strome collided with him with 6:37 left in regulation right after Canadiens forward Juraj Slafkovsky made it a 5-3 Montreal lead. Thompson attempted to skate off on his own but couldn’t put weight down on his left leg.

Backup goalie Charlie Lindgren replaced Thompson, who had been outstanding for the Capitals in the first two games of the series, winning both with a .951 save percentage and a 1.47 goals-against average. He made 30 saves on 35 shots in Game 3.

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