Telcel service interrupted by damaged fibre optic cable

Telecommunications company Telcel announced Wednesday night that a damaged fiber optic cable caused intermittent service slowdowns and outages in various parts of Mexico during the afternoon.

The company said in a press release that it redirected the traffic through alternate servers, which put increased pressure on the rest of its network.

“Service is gradually returning to normal. Telcel offers an apology for the inconvenience its clients are experiencing because of this,” it said in the statement.

However, many customers reported problems Thursday morning as well, mostly with telephone service.

Customers in several areas of the Mexico City metropolitan area reported poor service and outages throughout the day on Wednesday, as did some in Chihuahua and Nuevo León.

The website Downdetector said millions of users were affected by the outage over the course of seven hours.

Technology experts announced at the beginning of the quarantine period that the increased number of workers switching to a home office would slow but not break the internet in Mexico, but Wednesday’s outage was the fourth such incident this month.

Telcel users had to deal with network failures on May 7, 9 and 20, as well. On those occasions, Telcel’s sister telecommunications company Telmex also had trouble providing its services.

The companies said that the outages were due to damage done to their fiber optic networks by third parties, not server overload.

As of March, Telcel had a total of 77.21 million cellular phone customers, while Temex had 9.79 million home internet clients.

Source: El Economista (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
A pot of alligator juniper saplings in a large greenhouse with a sign reading "Sabino" (Spanish for alligator juniper)

New pact aims to restore Mexico’s natural protected areas with 300 million tree plantings

0
Officials say the tree plantings will revive forests, protect wildlife corridors and boost rural incomes in 32 natural protected areas across the country.
Mexican schoolchildren

Education Ministry plan to cut school year by 40 days sparks backlash

0
The proposal to end the school year early due to the World Cup provoked such a strong backlash that President Sheinbaum found it necessary to distance herself from her education minister's plan.
Natural gas pipelines

Mexico to invest US $8B to expand natural gas pipeline network

0
Mexico has announced a push to build up gas pipelines and power plants, aiming to ease dependence on U.S. natural gas and secure its energy supply.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity