Adobe’s Major Outage Sends Creatives On Edge, Airing Annoyances On Social Media
By Mikelle Leow, 28 May 2020
Image via DANIEL CONSTANTE / Shutterstock.com
Creatives were in a bind on Wednesday as Adobe’s cloud services suffered a major outage, leaving them unable to work and in fear about not being able to meet their deadlines.
The blackout, involving eight “major” issues with Creative Cloud and four with Adobe Services, seemed to have started at about 6am PT (9am ET). Since Adobe had made the decision to go completely cloud-based, it was impossible for customers to sign in and access their projects to be worked on elsewhere.
According to The Register, affected services in the US included Adobe Stock, Creative Cloud Assets, Lightroom, Premiere Rush, Spark, Adobe Admin Console, account management, cloud documents, publish services, collaboration and sign in.
Adobe did not detail what was causing the issues, and simply tweeted, “Our teams are investigating the issue and working to get this resolved ASAP.”
As the system had gone offline for hours, creatives were on their toes about not being able to finish their work on time.
“I’m on a deadline and losing money, and my client will simply go somewhere else if I can’t complete a project,” one user tweeted.
“So 90-percent of designers on the planet just simultaneously stopped working? How is this cloud b***sh*t better?” another wrote.
Others pointed out that they wouldn’t be in this frantic state if Adobe hadn’t fully invested in a cloud-based system, or if the company at least had an offline backup model customers could use during a crash.
One Twitter user said they were in the midst of editing their final project, which was due on the day of the outage. “I don’t know what to turn in,” they wrote.
Adobe finally shared at 1.35pm PT (4.35pm ET)—more than seven hours after the cloud service went down—that its cloud services had been “fully restored.”
“Thanks so much for your patience while we worked to get things resolved,” the company’s support team concluded.
@creativecloud @AdobeCare keep getting this message but nothing to do with my firewall settings... pic.twitter.com/bZewrtcKOz
— geliwood (@geliwood) May 27, 2020
Tell that to my clients.
— Rogelio (@MrRogelioG) May 27, 2020
How can the entirity of Adobe Creative Suite be down right now? So 90% of designers on the planet just simultaneously stopped working? How is this cloud bullshit better? #adobe @AdobeCare
— Kevin Q (@KMoneyRadio) May 27, 2020
Same as everyone else... Really poor considering how many cannot get work done! pic.twitter.com/4PjSyXSg2E
— Chris Gonzalez (@ccgonzalez82) May 27, 2020
#Adobe: *implements subscription service to encourage people to pay and not pirate*
— Toni (@evenmoretonic) May 27, 2020
Adobe Servers: *die* #AdobeCreativeClouddown #Adobedown
Creatives around the World: pic.twitter.com/6WvrBg9R0Q
that feeling when you have deadlines right around the corner but nothing is working because adobe is down. rip
— Satchel (@_Satchely) May 27, 2020
So do customers get a refund for this? Adobe siphons an insane amount of money out of my account every year for me to essentially use three apps. I'm on a deadline and losing money and my client will simply go somewhere else if I can't complete a project.
— Woodhouse (@woodhouse74) May 27, 2020
I can't even open the Adobe Creative Suite that I have installed locally on my computer. This should *never* happen. If your servers are down I should *always* be able to open the software on my own machine.
— Björn "Max Buses" Rådström 🚍🚏 (@bjornradstrom) May 27, 2020
This is unacceptable @Adobe.
I spent all day and night editing this video for a final project, and it didn’t save to Adobe Cloud (or at least i think it didn’t). It’s due today, so I dont know what to turn in.
— SGT-_-BONSAI (@BonsaiSgt) May 27, 2020
It be so much easier to allow subscriber to have a offline versions instead of having a mandatory internet model
— lewis oxley (@lewisoxley) May 27, 2020
Our cloud services have been fully restored. Thanks so much for your patience while we worked to get things resolved.
— Adobe Care (@AdobeCare) May 27, 2020
[via The Register, cover image via DANIEL CONSTANTE / Shutterstock.com]