Microsoft’s cloud and gaming ecosystems were shaken on Thursday, October 9, 2025, as a widespread outage left thousands of Microsoft 365, Teams, Azure, Microsoft Store, Xbox and Minecraft users unable to authenticate, log in, or reach admin portals — with a particularly high volume of reports...
Microsoft customers across Europe and parts of Africa and the Middle East experienced intermittent Azure Portal and related service disruptions on October 9, 2025, after Microsoft confirmed a capacity loss affecting Azure Front Door (AFD) instances that routed traffic for portal and...
Microsoft Azure customers reported widespread trouble accessing the Azure Portal and other services on October 9, 2025, after Microsoft confirmed a capacity loss in Azure Front Door (AFD) that produced intermittent portal outages and downstream service degradation across parts of Europe and...
agentic ai
ai governance
azure front door
azure front door outage
azure outage
azure portal downtime
cloud outages
cloud reliability
cloudresilience
developer velocity
edge computing
edge fabric
edge outage
edge reliability
enterprise ai
entra id
identity management
incident response
kubernetes
kubernetes edge
microsoft 365
microsoft outage
microsoft teams
network resilience
On a busy Monday in late November, thousands of Microsoft 365 users worldwide found critical pieces of their productivity stack—Outlook, Exchange Online, and Microsoft Teams—either sluggish or unusable, triggering a fast-moving outage that exposed the resilience limits of cloud-first workflows...
Monday’s widespread interruption of Microsoft services—affecting Outlook, Exchange Online, Microsoft Teams and other Microsoft 365 components—exposed how deeply businesses and consumers now depend on a single cloud ecosystem and how a single configuration change can cascade into hours of global...
Microsoft Azure customers across Asia, the Middle East and parts of Europe saw increased latency and degraded performance after multiple undersea fiber‑optic cables in the Red Sea were cut in early September, forcing traffic onto longer, congested detours and exposing persistent vulnerabilities...
Microsoft’s Azure cloud platform suffered measurable performance degradation after multiple undersea fiber‑optic cables in the Red Sea were severed on September 6, 2025, forcing large volumes of traffic onto longer, congested routes and exposing brittle points in the global internet backbone...
Microsoft’s Azure customers in and around the Middle East experienced measurable latency and service disruption after multiple undersea fibre-optic cables in the Red Sea were damaged, forcing traffic onto longer, more congested routes and exposing persistent fragilities in the global internet...
Internet traffic between South Asia, the Gulf and parts of the Middle East slowed dramatically after multiple subsea fibre‑optic cables in the Red Sea were damaged, forcing carriers and cloud providers to reroute traffic, prompting Microsoft Azure to warn customers of higher latency and exposing...
Microsoft’s Azure cloud briefly showed the limits of virtual resilience when several undersea fiber-optic cables in the Red Sea were cut on 6 September 2025, forcing traffic onto longer detours, producing higher-than-normal latency for cross‑region traffic, and triggering urgent...
Microsoft Azure customers experienced measurable slowdowns and higher-than-normal latency after multiple undersea fiber-optic cables in the Red Sea were cut, forcing cloud traffic onto longer, congested detours and exposing brittle physical chokepoints beneath modern cloud resilience. Background...
A concentrated cluster of undersea cable failures in the Red Sea has throttled internet performance across South Asia and the Gulf, forcing cloud providers and carriers to reroute traffic and leaving businesses and consumers to contend with higher latency, intermittent packet loss, and slower...
asia-europe
bab el mandeb
bgp
cdn
chokepoints
cloud providers
cloudresilience
cross-region
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imewe
internet backbone
latency
microsoft
microsoft azure
middle east
multi-cloud
network outages
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outage
red sea
red sea cable cuts
redundancy
repair ships
routing
rtt
sea-me-we-4
smw4
south asia
subsea cables
subsea internet
suez canal
traffic engineering
Microsoft warned customers that portions of Azure experienced higher‑than‑normal latency after multiple undersea fiber‑optic cables in the Red Sea were reported cut on September 6, 2025 — an event that forced international traffic onto longer, congested detours, produced localized slowdowns...
bgp
cable cuts
cloud performance
cloudresiliencecloud solutions
cross-region
disaster recovery
imewe
internet backbone
latency
microsoft azure
red sea
service health
smw4
subsea cables
traffic engineering
A sudden cluster of undersea fiber cuts in the Red Sea has forced Microsoft Azure and other cloud and carrier operators to reroute traffic, producing measurable latency and slower internet performance across parts of South Asia, the Gulf and beyond—an event that exposes how a handful of damaged...
Microsoft Azure users saw slower-than-normal responses after multiple undersea fiber-optic cables in the Red Sea were reported damaged, forcing traffic onto longer detours while Microsoft and carrier partners rerouted and rebalanced capacity to preserve reachability.
Background / Overview
The...
azure service health
bgp reconvergence
cloudresilience
connectivity
cross-region
incident response
latency
microsoft azure
red sea corridor
subsea cables
traffic engineering
Microsoft has warned customers that parts of Azure may show higher‑than‑normal latency after multiple undersea fiber‑optic cables in the Red Sea were reported cut on 6 September 2025, forcing traffic onto longer detours while carriers and cloud operators reroute and rebalance capacity...
azure service health
bgp
capacity-rebalancing
cloudresilience
connectivity
cross-region
disaster recovery
expressroute
internet backbone
latency
microsoft azure
red sea
routing
subsea cables
traffic engineering
Microsoft’s Azure cloud experienced measurable performance degradation after multiple undersea fiber-optic cables in the Red Sea were cut, forcing traffic onto longer detours and exposing how physical shipping lanes and seabed cables remain a critical, fragile layer beneath cloud-era resilience...
Microsoft’s Azure platform warned of higher-than-normal network latency for traffic traversing the Middle East after multiple undersea fiber cuts in the Red Sea forced rerouting of international traffic beginning at 05:45 UTC on 6 September 2025. (backup.azure.status.microsoft, reuters.com)...
Microsoft’s terse Service Health advisory on September 6, 2025 — warning that “network traffic traversing through the Middle East may experience increased latency due to undersea fiber cuts in the Red Sea” — was the first public signal of a disruption that quickly rippled through global cloud...
Microsoft Azure users and large swathes of internet users across Asia, the Middle East and parts of Europe experienced measurable slowdowns and elevated latency after multiple undersea fibre‑optic cables in the Red Sea were cut on September 6, 2025, forcing cloud and carrier engineers to reroute...