If this morning you opened WhatsApp and the messages simply didn’t arrive, or you tried to access Instagram and the app returned a blank screen, don’t worry — it’s not your website. The morning of Friday, June 12, Meta is experiencing a massive drop globally which affects all its main platforms: Facebook, Facebook Messenger, Instagram and WhatsApp. The first reports of the outage began to accumulate from approximately 9:00 am ETand since then the complaints from millions of users have not stopped coming.
The scale of the problem is enormous. According to data from Downdetectorthe platform specialized in tracking interruptions of digital services in exact time, more than 62,000 reports related to Facebook were recorded around 10:11 a.m. ET, while Instagram racked up more than 8,000 complaints in that same period. And that’s just what was recorded in a specific window of time — the reporting curve continued to climb as the morning progressed.
What is failing on each platform
The problems are not the same in all apps, but they all hurt the same if you use them daily.
In Facebookthe most common faults include login errorsfull loading issues, and the inability to interact with posts. According to Downdetector, reports point to failures directly in the application, problems with login and connection errors with the server.
Facebook Messenger is suffering perhaps even more as users report they can’t log inthey have problems within the app and can’t even send messages. For many people who rely on Messenger to communicate with family and work, this is a serious disruption.
On Instagram, errors are mainly linked to the inability to update the feedview stories or upload new content. Many of the reports point to problems within the application. Several users described encountering blank screens, 404 error codes, and profiles that simply won’t load — both on mobile and in the browser.
WhatsApp was not left behind. Users report that They cannot send or receive messagesmake voice or video calls, or share multimedia files. The problem was especially pronounced in WhatsApp Webwhich recorded the highest concentration of failures. A percentage of the reports correspond to the mobile app, which suggests that the desktop version was hit harder.
When your communication tools go down, where do you go? To the social network that still works, of course. X (formerly Twitter) quickly filled with complaints, memes and screenshots of Meta’s errors, becoming the digital refuge of the moment.
The disruption is truly global in scope. Users in the United States, Latin America, Spain, India and other countries reported problems simultaneously, which rules out whether it is a regional failure or a specific problem with a native web provider. When more than 100,000 reports accumulate on monitoring platforms in a matter of hours, it is clear that The failure comes from the Meta servers.
Meta remains silent about the causes
So far, Meta has not explained what is happening. The company has not offered any technical details about the origin of the outage or an estimated recovery time.
It is not the first time that Meta faces a situation of this type. The company has had massive outages in the past — the most notable was in October 2021, when Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp were out of service for more than six hours due to a BGP protocol configuration error. That time, the crash cost Meta hundreds of millions of dollars in advertising revenue and affected the communication of millions of people around the world. Will it be something similar this time? For now, no one within the company is saying it.
What is clear is that The impact of a Meta crash goes far beyond personal inconvenience. Millions of small businesses depend on these platforms to sell, serve customers, and communicate. Content creators lose reach and income every hour that their posts cannot reach their audience. And a huge number of people in the world use WhatsApp as their only channel of daily communication.
Keep reading:
• Facebook: the reasons behind the technology giant’s first drop in active users in its 18-year history
• Facebook, Instagram and Threads partially recover after a global decline
• Supreme Court rejects Meta’s appeal and allows a lawsuit in Vermont for addiction to his social networks





