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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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UK

Manchester Arena bombing survivors to get almost £20m in payouts

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Manchester Arena bombing survivors to get almost £20m in payouts

A judge has ruled that nearly £20m is to be paid out to 16 survivors of the Manchester Arena bombing who were children at the time of the tragedy.

Twenty-two people were murdered and hundreds injured in the suicide bombing at an Ariana Grande concert at Manchester Arena on 22 May, 2017.

Amounts of between £2,770 and £11.4m were agreed at a hearing on Thursday at the Manchester Civil Courts of Justice for 16 youngsters, all aged under 16 at the time of the attack.

The total amount to be paid comes in at £19,928,150.

Some of the youngsters suffered “catastrophic” and life-changing injuries, and others suffered psychological damage after 22-year-old Salman Abedi detonated a backpack bomb leaving the concert.

The claims were made against, and will be paid by, the defendants in the case – those responsible for the safe and secure running of the arena event.

People hold a minute of silence in a square in central Manchester, on 25 May 2017. Pic: AP
Image:
People hold a minute of silence in a square in central Manchester, on 25 May 2017. Pic: AP

Those contributing to the settlement include: SMG Europe Holdings, which managed the venue; Showsec International Ltd, responsible for crowd management; and British Transport Police (BTP) and Greater Manchester Police (GMP), responsible for policing the area.

A public inquiry into the bombing, led by Sir John Saunders, found that chances to prevent the attack had been missed, and also noted “serious shortcomings” in security and individual failings.

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On Thursday, Judge Nigel Bird approved the 16 claims – agreed between their lawyers and the defendants – as they all involved children or those without mental capacity.

The 16 survivors and their families cannot be identified, due to a court order.

It is understood that following the hearing, claims by another 352 people, all adults deemed to have capacity, including the families of the 22 who lost loved ones, will now be agreed between lawyers for the claimants and the defendants.

Those agreements have been made out-of-court, so no details of any public money to be paid out by public bodies BTP and GMP have been made public.

Pic: AP
Image:
Pic: AP

The four organisations have apologised to the bereaved families and to the survivors, lawyers for the claimants said, and have admitted their failures.

Judge Bird told the hearing: “Each of these cases has a common link, that is injuries and loss suffered, arising out of a single and unimaginable act of terrorism committed on the evening of May 22 2017 at the end of a concert attended by very many young people and their families.”

“The love and care a parent gives to an injured child is beyond monetary value,” he added.

Judge Bird also paid tribute to the “courage, dedication and fortitude” of the families involved in each case, adding: “Each through their quiet determination has brought about promises of change in the hope that in the future, other families need not go through what they have been through.”

After the hearing, a joint statement was issued from the legal teams at Hudgell Solicitors, Slater & Gordon and Broudie Jackson Canter, the three main firms representing the claimants.

Figen Murray, mother of 29-year-old victim Martyn Hett. Pic: PA
Image:
Figen Murray, mother of 29-year-old victim Martyn Hett. Pic: PA

The statement said: “This is not a day of celebration. It is a moment to acknowledge the mistakes that were made and the unimaginable suffering our clients have endured over the past eight and a half years.

“We now expect all parties to honour their commitment to do what they can to prevent those same mistakes from happening again.”

Martyn’s Law, named in memory of Martyn Hett, 29, who was killed in the attack, has since been implemented, to better protect public venues from terror attacks.

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Sports

Sources: Mizzou QB Pribula to transfer, skip bowl

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Sources: Mizzou QB Pribula to transfer, skip bowl

Quarterback Beau Pribula is on the move again.

Pribula, who spent this season at Missouri after transferring from Penn State, has informed the Tigers’ coaching staff that he plans to enter the transfer portal, sources confirmed to ESPN on Thursday.

Pribula doesn’t plan to play for the Tigers (8-4) when they take on No. 19 Virginia (10-3) in the TaxSlayer Gator Bowl on Dec. 27 (7:30 p.m. ET, ABC), sources told ESPN’s Pete Thamel.

Pribula, a senior from York, Pennsylvania, helped the Tigers to a 6-1 start this season, with the only loss coming against then-No. 8 Alabama. But then he was hurt early in the third quarter of a 17-10 loss at Vanderbilt on Oct. 25. His left ankle was placed in an air cast and trainers carted him off the field.

Doctors determined that Pribula dislocated the ankle but didn’t fracture it. He missed two games before returning to play in a 17-6 loss at then-No. 8 Oklahoma. He also played in the Tigers’ 31-17 win at Arkansas in Missouri’s regular-season finale.

In 10 games, Pribula completed 67.4% of his passes for 1,941 yards with 11 touchdowns and nine interceptions. He also ran for 297 yards with six scores.

Pribula battled Sam Horn for the starting job in training camp, and both quarterbacks were expected to play in the opener. Horn, however, suffered a fractured right leg on his first play of the game in a 61-6 win against FCS program Central Arkansas and missed the rest of the season.

Freshman Matt Zollers ran the offense when Horn and Pribula were sidelined, and coach Eli Drinkwitz said Thursday that Zollers will start in the Gator Bowl.

Pribula, who was ranked the No. 8 dual-threat quarterback in the class of 2022 by ESPN, spent his first two seasons at Penn State. He left the Nittany Lions before their CFP first-round game in December 2024 after starter Drew Allar announced he was returning in 2025.

CBS Sports first reported Pribula’s intention to transfer.

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Sports

Perkins among 4 starters returning to Ole Miss

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Perkins among 4 starters returning to Ole Miss

Ole Miss linebacker Suntarine Perkins, defensive tackle Will Echoles, center Brycen Sanders and defensive back Antonio Kite have committed to returning in 2026, the school announced Thursday.

All four starters have signed deals with the school to return under new coach Pete Golding next year, a source told ESPN, ahead of the Rebels’ first-ever College Football Playoff game.

The Rebels are working to retain their key returning players amid former coach Lane Kiffin’s move to LSU and the impending opening of the transfer portal window on Jan. 2. Kiffin is taking several assistant coaches and staffers with him to Baton Rouge.

Echoles earned second-team All-SEC honors and leads all Power 4 defensive tackles with 26 pressures this season, according to ESPN Research. Perkins was a third-team All-SEC selection in 2024 after recording a team-high 10.5 sacks.

The Rebels are also attempting to bring back star running back Kewan Lacy, the SEC’s second-leading rusher, and starting quarterback Trinidad Chambliss has said he’ll weigh his options if he receives an NCAA waiver for an additional season of eligibility.

Kiffin left for SEC rival LSU on Nov. 30 and will not coach Ole Miss in the CFP. Golding, the Rebels’ defensive coordinator for the past three years, was promoted to permanent head coach.

The No. 6 seed Rebels host No. 11 Tulane on Saturday (3:30 p.m. ET, TNT/HBO Max/truTV) in their first-round game, a rematch of a nonconference meeting the Rebels won 45-10 on Sept. 20.

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