Advertisement
Promo

Online business Toolkit

Cabinet Office hit by Web site outage

Tom Espiner ZDNet.co.uk

Published: 01 Dec 2005 12:55 GMT

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

The Cabinet Office Web site was forced offline on Wednesday because of technical problems, the government has admitted.

A Cabinet Office spokesperson told ZDNet UK that the site was offline due to 'maintenance being carried out by our ISP", which is understood to be Pipex.

The period of downtime began on Wednesday morning. The site was available by Wednesday evening, but had vanished again by Thursday morning, reappearing by Thursday lunchtime.

According to Cabinet Office Webmaster David Stiffell, the downtime was caused by a network routing problem.

"Basically the hosters are moving facilities — this is a third-party problem with their network routing," said Stiffell. Stiffell added that the Cabinet Office uses a number of telecoms service providers, and that Pipex hosts its servers.

Pipex had not responded to requests for comment at the time of writing.

Stiffell declined to discuss whether the terms of the government's contracts with its suppliers would allow it to claim compensation, but he indicated that the Cabinet Office is not pleased with the situation.

"Would you be happy? I'm not," said Stiffell.

Stiffell explained that its Web site was successfully moved from Pipex to servers run by BT, but that the router problems occurred with the migration back from BT to Pipex.

"It was planned maintenance, and the move to the BT service was completed successfully. But when we moved back, our ISP had router problems," said Stiffell.

Last week the Cabinet Office published eAccessibility of public sector services in the European Union, a comprehensive report on accessibility of government online services across the European Union (EU).

The report revealed that only 3 percent of the 436 online public service Web sites achieved a Level A rating, which is considered to be the minimum standard under the W3C Web Content Accessibility Guidelines. A further 10 percent achieved limited level A and 17 percent marginal fail Level A. The remaining 70 percent were found to fail Level A. No Web sites tested reached the higher double A standard, according to the Cabinet Office.

The Cabinet Office didn't see a contradiction between its efforts to promote eAccessibility and its Web site problems.

"It could be more ironic — if the issue of resilience had been covered in the report," said Stiffell. "eAccessibility and resilience are separate issues," he added.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendlyPrint with EPSON

Did you find this article useful?
63 out of 168 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

1 comment

  1. Hi, I could have the wrong end of the stick but I... Anonymous

Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:




Sentry Posts Blog

Authentication risks all too human

Risks to successful online banking identification and authentication using smartcards involve a mixture of human and technological factors, according to the European Network and Information... More

1 comment

Opera censors Chinese content

Opera has updated the Chinese version of its mobile browser to stop users accessing restricted content. Opera Mini was updated on Friday from an international to a Chinese version,... More

2 comments

Symantec website breached

Security company Symantec has said that one of its websites was successfully breached. Romanian security researcher 'Unu' posted details of the breach in a blog post on Monday. Unu... More

Post a comment

Video icon

Video

Google Chrome

Roundup: Full coverage of Google Chrome

The search giant has launched a beta of its own open-source browser, sending a clear challenge to Microsoft in the way it lets users work with applications More

Blog: Google Chrome has Microsoft's code inside, says MS manager

And furthermore, he says, that's a good thing... More

Blog: Google Chrome — nine things we've found since launch

Google must be very happy with the coverage Chrome has gathered. But it's not all good news... More


Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters