International

Twitter Down Globally; Users Face 'Cannot Retrieve Tweets' Error

Twitter has not yet acknowledged the outage or provided any explanation for the same. According to Down Detector, a website that tracks online service disruptions, over 4,000 reports of issues with Twitter were received so far. 

Twitter down globally
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Social media platform Twitter was hit with a global outage on Saturday as thousands of users complained about not being able to refresh the site and access tweets.

Some users saw the error 'cannot retrieve tweets' or 'rate limit exceeded' as they tried to load the home page. According to reports, this is the third such outage this year that platform faced.

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Some users saw the error cannot retrieve tweets or rate limit exceeded 

On February 8, it was reported that many Twitter users were unable to tweet, follow accounts or access their direct messages as the Elon Musk-owned platform experienced a slew of technical glitches.

Similarly on March 6, Twitter reportedly experienced a ‘bevvy’ of glitches. Some users were unable to log in and images were not loading for others.

Back in November, engineers who left Twitter described for The Associated Press why they expect considerable unpleasantness for Twitter's more than 230 million users now that well over two-thirds of Twitter's pre-Musk core services engineers are apparently gone. 

One Twitter engineer, who had worked in core services, told the AP in November that engineering team clusters were down from about 15 people pre-Musk — not including team leaders, who were all laid off — to three or four before even more resignations.

Then more institutional knowledge that can't be replaced overnight walked out the door.

"Everything could break," the programmer said. 

Twitter has not yet acknowledged the outage or provided any explanation for the same. According to Down Detector, a website that tracks online service disruptions, over 4,000 reports of issues with Twitter were received so far. 

#TwitterDown and #RateLimitExceeded are the top two trending hashtags being used for those who can still access the app.