I’m not the only one who finds this timing suspicious, Starting with the 
publishers of 60 Minutes themselves :-)

CBS:

The outage comes the morning after "60 Minutes" aired an interview with a 
whistleblower who said Facebook is aware of how it amplifies hate, 
misinformation and unrest but claimed the company hides what it knows.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/facebook-instagram-whatsapp-down-2021-10-04/

https://abcnews.go.com/Technology/facebook-instagram-users-us/story?id=80397437

https://www.cnbc.com/2021/10/04/facebook-shares-drop-5percent-after-site-outage-and-whistleblower-interview.html

https://www.insidenova.com/headlines/facebook-instagram-down-after-60-minutes-whistleblower-report/article_29977530-2531-11ec-b5ae-73311c46edfb.html

https://adage.com/article/digital-marketing-ad-tech-news/what-facebook-telling-advertisers-about-60-minutes-whistleblower/2370346




 -mel beckman

On Oct 4, 2021, at 1:36 PM, Blake Dunlap <iki...@gmail.com> wrote:


If there isn't an undernetwork capable of being backdoored with the proper keys 
(I'd be shocked if there isn't - the big players have very good infra and DR 
people), I suspect there will be one soonish.

It doesnt do much good to have DR plans and keys otherwise if you can't even 
get to the locks without getting on a plane.

Regardless of how people may feel about the company, I just feel bad for their 
sres right now and am drinking one in their honor. I just want to know what an 
October meltdown gets called in the pm.

On Mon, Oct 4, 2021, 15:24 Baldur Norddahl 
<baldur.nordd...@gmail.com<mailto:baldur.nordd...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Not in such a primitive fashion no. But they could definitely have a secondary 
network that will continue to work even if something goes wrong with the 
primary.

On Mon, 4 Oct 2021 at 22:16, PJ Capelli 
<pjcape...@pm.me<mailto:pjcape...@pm.me>> wrote:
Seems unlikely that FB internal controls would allow such a backdoor ...

"Never to get lost, is not living" - Rebecca Solnit

Sent with ProtonMail<https://protonmail.com/> Secure Email.

‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
On Monday, October 4th, 2021 at 4:12 PM, Baldur Norddahl 
<baldur.nordd...@gmail.com<mailto:baldur.nordd...@gmail.com>> wrote:


On Mon, 4 Oct 2021 at 21:58, Michael Thomas 
<m...@mtcc.com<mailto:m...@mtcc.com>> wrote:


On 10/4/21 11:48 AM, Luke Guillory wrote:


I believe the original change was 'automatic' (as in configuration done via a 
web interface). However, now that connection to the outside world is down, 
remote access to those tools don't exist anymore, so the emergency procedure is 
to gain physical access to the peering routers and do all the configuration 
locally.

Assuming that this is what actually happened, what should fb have done 
different (beyond the obvious of not screwing up the immediate issue)? This 
seems like it's a single point of failure. Should all of the BGP speakers have 
been dual homed or something like that? Or should they not have been mixing ops 
and production networks? Sorry if this sounds dumb.

Facebook is a huge network. It is doubtful that what is going on is this 
simple. So I will make no guesses to what Facebook is or should be doing.

However the traditional way for us small timers is to have a backdoor using 
someone else's network. Nowadays this could be a simple 4/5G router with a VPN, 
to a terminal server that allows the operator to configure the equipment 
through the monitor port even when the config is completely destroyed.

Regards,

Baldur




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