After three days of interrupted service, empty inboxes, and no internet connectivity, millions of Blackberry users’ service is finally being restored. Blackberry’s problems spanned the globe, with users from the Middle East to Canada left offline.
With Twitter exploding over the past few days with irate users struggling to find answers and urging Blackberry to restore service quickly, the widespread disruption makes one thing clear: We must think about the impact our dependence, as a society, on a single device such as the Blackberry.
The service disruption made work slower for those who rely on Blackberry e-mails; for example, congressional staffers struggled during the 12-hour debate on the Senate floor about free trade agreements to coordinate between aides on the floor and in Senate offices. While the outage did not stop government business, it did slow it down and highlight dependence on mobile e-mail.
One wonders, even, if our commander-in-chief, famous for his Blackberry addiction, was left helpless and disconnected.
Similarly, business on Wall Street slowed as bankers were hindered without mobile access. Many banks, like Barclay’s Capital, for example, issue only Blackberry’s to their employees – making the disruption’s impact inevitably disastrous.
Blackberry’s stock has been plummeting – the recent outage will do little to help it.
Twitter and Facebook feeds over the past few days have been cluttered with grief, outrage, and humor, all about the outage.
It is evident, especially over the past few months, that technology has an incredible power to empower people, with social media and blackberry messaging enabling protests and riots alike.
However, our dependence, as a society, on a single device, is frightening. The fact that our financial institutions’ and government’s functioning effectively could be hindered by lack of internet on mobile phones highlights not only our reliance, but also the incredible power that these companies hold.
If Blackberry service completely shut down, would Wall Street and the hill, too, slow to a complete halt?
Perhaps the answer is simply to diversify our mobile phone options. Or maybe we need to hold Blackberry, as a company providing society a necessity, more accountable. Whatever move we take, we, as a society, need to realize that smart phone outages will keep coming; it is up to us to decide how best we prepare to deal with them.
Photo Credit: Honou
The Discussion
I can't believe we pay so much money for this technology. For a minute, I was running a $250 phone bill just so we could get on the internet. It has gotten ridiculous, so we quit it. No more smartphones, no data packages, no cool apps. My daughter complains about how "without" she is now that she can only text. What's even funnier, is that to talk on my phone I have to stand outside my house in the middle of my yard! I love technology! :)
I completely disagree with this statement that smart phone outages are coming. The reason why BlackBerry and *only* BlackBerry devices have these supposed outages is that all data coming in and going out of your smartphone is channeled through RIM's Network Operations Center located in North America (Ontario Canada and Texas) and Europe. Any disruption to these centers would be massive outages like the one we experienced.
The reason why RIM continues to use this business model of having a all their phones channel data to archaic centers is because they can charge carriers an extra fee for using their BES and BIS services, a fee that they pocket themselves (usually around $5-10 range and are silently tacked on to your phone bill).
2 Replies
I have a blackberry, and let me tell you, Research In Motion needs to improve many things.