Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp and Messenger were experiencing disruptions that affected users around the world.
The outages occurred around 5pm on Thursday afternoon and affect millions of users, and some are experiencing total blackouts.
This was the second time all Facebook-owned services crashed last month, the latest hit on March 19th.
Some users can access their accounts, but have not been able to update their news feed to social networking apps and desktop sites.

Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp and Messenger were experiencing disruptions that affected users around the world.
Facebook was the first to go down, followed Instagram and then Messenger joined the group.
However, WhatsApp was experiencing its own problems earlier in the day, which had been fixed, but has now joined the fallen apps team.
The company that owns Mark Zuckerberg has not yet addressed the issues or announced what caused the mass cut.
DownDetector, an online site that monitors outages, showed users in New York, Texas, California and Arizona had problems.

DownDetector, an online site that monitors outages, showed users in New York, Texas, California and Arizona have problems

The company that owns Mark Zuckerberg has not yet addressed the issues or announced what caused the mass cut.
Problems were also reported in the UK, Australia, China and other countries around the world.
Some users reported seeing error messages when using the services, while others saw posts from hours ago.
Those trying to reach Facebook received an error message that says, “Sorry, an error has occurred. We are working to fix it as soon as we can.
At the peak of the crash, around 5:57 pm, on Facebook, there were more than 121,000 reports of broadcasts and Instagram reached more than 42,000, while Messenger had about 4,900 and WhatsApp showed more than 1,500, all in the United States alone.

Those trying to reach Facebook received an error message that said, “Sorry, an error has occurred. We are working to fix it as soon as we can.”

When one social networking platform crashes, in the case of Thursday the 4th, users turn to another to share their frustrations and also see if they might be the only ones experiencing a problem, and the platform you choose is usually Twitter

Donie O’Sullivan suggested that the accident may be due to people working from home and spending more time traveling around jobs than doing real work.
When one social networking platform crashes, in the case of Thursday the 4th, users turn to another to share their frustrations and also see if they could be the only ones experiencing a problem, and the platform you choose is usually Twitter.
Donie O’Sullivan suggested that the accident may result from people working from home and spending more time commuting around jobs than doing real work.
However, other users pointed to the fact that many people have criticized Twitter, even though they still used it to share their thoughts on Facebook and other services that didn’t work.

However, other users pointed to the fact that many people have criticized Twitter, even though they still use it to share their thoughts on Facebook and other services that don’t work.
All Facebook-owned platforms recently fell on March 19 for about an hour, and also reached users around the world.
Users visiting Instagram online were shown a simple error message that said “Server Error 5xx” without any other information.
Some Facebook users were able to log in to the app, although 63% of reports on downdetector.com suggested there was a “total shutdown”.