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![]() by Staff Writers San Francisco (AFP) April 8, 2020
The Snapchat application popular with young smartphone users went offline Wednesday for undetermined reasons, the company said. The outage, the cause of which was not explained by the company, lasted several hours, making unavailable the service known for its disappearing messages and other content. "We're aware many Snapchatters are having trouble using the app. Hang tight - we're looking into it," said a tweet from Snapchat Support. The first reports of the outage came around 1330 GMT, according to the monitoring website Downdetector. Around 2030 GMT, a new message said the service was restored. "We've patched things up," the updated post said. "If you're still having trouble, please let us know!" Parent firm Snap Inc. did not respond to a query about the outage. It came as people worldwide were turning to social media for information and entertainment as they sheltered at home from the coronavirus pandemic. Snapchat said last week it saw huge jumps in engagement with the app as a result of the crisis, with real-time communication up 50 percent in March. To support the global COVID-19 relief efforts, Snapchat has launched a new augmented reality donation effort allowing users to donate to relief efforts through its "Snapchat Lenses," glasses designed for the app. An image and video sharing tool especially popular among teens, Snapchat claims the app is regularly used by 75 percent of all 13- to 34-year-olds in the United States. It has 190 million daily users -- about 60 million more than Twitter -- but is still operating at a loss.
![]() ![]() WeWork sues Japan's SoftBank for backing out of deal Washington (AFP) April 7, 2020 Office-sharing giant WeWork on Tuesday sued SoftBank claiming the Japan-based technology investment group breached its contractual obligations by backing out of a $3 billion rescue plan. The lawsuit filed in a US court in Delaware came just days after SoftBank said it was backing out of the plan to purchase WeWork shares to shore up the finances of the struggling sharing-economy giant. WeWork's board of directors called the SoftBank action "a clear breach of its contractual obligations" under an ... read more
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