Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Microsoft Azure outage disrupts airlines, telecoms, and global services

Downdetector becomes the real MVP as Microsoft trips over its own update

Add as a preferred source on Google
Microsoft Azure
Unsplash

If your business or daily tools rely on cloud services like Azure or AWS, this outage is a stark reminder of how fragile “always online” really is.

So yeah, Microsoft’s cloud stuff, Azure, basically face-planted yesterday (Wednesday), causing headaches for businesses, airlines, and phone companies all over the world. Things eventually started getting better later in the day, but it was pretty chaotic for a while.

Recommended Videos

A site called Downdetector, which tracks when things break online, said they got over 18,000 complaints at the peak before it calmed down as Microsoft started fixing things.

What broke it? Apparently, someone flipped the wrong switch – Microsoft called it a “configuration change” – in a key part of Azure called “Front Door.” This thing is like a super-highway for getting content and apps delivered fast. When it went down, it caused all sorts of errors and timeouts for anyone relying on it. Even Microsoft’s own stuff like Microsoft 365 and Xbox got hit.

People using Azure also couldn’t even log in to manage their stuff for a bit, though Microsoft says that’s mostly fixed now. Still, some smaller bits might be wonky for a little longer.

The Reuters report also detailed about Alaska Airlines which had website problems, and even Vodafone UK and Heathrow Airport had some hiccups.

Déjà Vu? Another Big Cloud Fail

Here’s the really crazy part: this is the second time in just a week that a major cloud service has gone down! Remember when Amazon’s AWS broke last week, taking down Snapchat, Reddit, and a zillion other sites?

Having these back-to-back really makes you wonder how sturdy this whole cloud thing is, considering almost everything online runs on it these days.

Downdetector showed that the Microsoft 365 issues also got better as the day went on, thankfully.

The Cloud Giveth, and the Cloud Taketh Away

Look, cloud services like Azure and AWS are amazing. They enable businesses to do extraordinary things and expand up fast. However, when they break, everything breaks.

It’s a sobering reminder of how heavily we rely on a few megacorporations. One small error can unleash global disaster. On the good side, Microsoft appeared to respond fast, which may indicate that they are becoming more adept at dealing with these meltdowns. Still, it’s unsettling that the entire digital world appears to be based on flimsy footing.

Moinak Pal
Moinak Pal is has been working in the technology sector covering both consumer centric tech and automotive technology for the…
Windows users can finally pick when updates stop with Microsoft’s latest patch
From pausing updates on your own schedule to rolling back a broken PC in one click, here's everything new in Windows 11's July 2026 update.
Windows 11 Laptop

Patch Tuesday updates are usually a shrug-and-install affair, but Microsoft's July 2026 release actually gives you something to be excited about.

You can grab this update, tagged KB5101650, right now through Settings, or manually via the Microsoft Update Catalog if you'd rather not wait for it to roll out.

Read more
Can AI audiobooks narrate better than humans? This study says many listeners think so
New study finds listeners favor AI narrated audiobooks over traditional human narration in blind testing.
Audiobooks on Spotify on an iPhone.

You might assume most listeners would pick a real human voice over a synthetic one, but a new study says otherwise. Edison Research at SSRS surveyed 1,005 fiction audiobook fans in May 2026 for a study commissioned by AI audio company Spoken. The twist is that listeners rated the AI narration higher, and they did not even know it was AI until after they heard it (via Variety).

Why listeners favored the AI narration

Read more
Gemini can make sense of the world around you, but don’t let it observe your children just yet
AI can spot what a child is doing, but figuring out what it means still takes a human expert
Kid using an iPad

Google's Gemini models are becoming remarkably good at understanding videos, images, and conversations. A new study shows AI can even identify subtle behaviors in parent-child interactions with impressive accuracy. But here's the catch: while Gemini can reliably observe what is happening, researchers say it should not be trusted to decide what those behaviors actually mean.

Worth noting is that the study used Gemini 2.5 Pro, which is not Google's most advanced AI. That means future models could improve the results even further. Even so, the researchers argue that human experts remain essential.

Read more