Microsoft said on Friday that the outages that affected certain services of the company through some of the earlier days of this month were the result of cyberattacks, but said it saw no evidence of any customer data being accessed or compromised.
"Beginning in early June 2023, Microsoft identified
surges in traffic against some services that temporarily impacted
availability'" the company said in a blog post.
Microsoft said it opened an investigation and began tracking
the DDoS activity by the threat actor it refers to as Storm-1359 after it
identified the threat.
Microsoft did not immediately respond to a request by
Reuters as to whether the company had identified the party responsible for the
attack.
DDoS attacks work by directing high volumes of internet
traffic towards targeted servers in a relatively unsophisticated bid to knock
them offline.
Microsoft's 365 software suite, including Teams and Outlook,
were down for more than two hours for over thousands of users on June 5 and a
brief recurrence the following morning. That was the fourth such outage for
Microsoft in a year.
Earlier this month, the company said it had restored its
online services after an outage affected thousands of users of its 365 software
suite, including Teams and Outlook, for more than two hours.
Access to its productivity software such as Word and Excel
was down for nearly 18,000 users at its peak before easing to 906 at around
12:57 p.m. ET, according to Downdetector.com, which tracks internet outages.
At the time, the tech company had said it had rolled back a
system update to resolve the outage, without providing any detail.
In January, Microsoft was hit with a networking outage that
took down its cloud platform Azure along with services such as Teams and
Outlook, potentially affecting millions of users globally. © Reuters