At around 2 o'clock this afternoon, I found that NetEase Cloud Music could not be opened.
The web page reports an error 502 Bad Gateway and the App cannot be used.
The official website responded that it was an "infrastructure" failure:
But the failure has lasted for more than an hour and has not been restored at all.
The APP is also completely unavailable:
This is not the first time that NetEase Cloud Music has crashed. In March of this year, many netizens' login status suddenly failed and they were unable to use the music normally.
People familiar with the matter said that NetEase has established a data center in Guizhou, and its businesses will be relocated in stages. NetEase Cloud Music has just completed the migration of the Guizhou data center in Q2 2024. "The new data center will indeed have more problems, but it is said to save costs."
In this migration, Cloud Music and its independent App services were all moved to Guizhou. This involved the stable migration of more than 2,000 applications and 1 million QPS, as well as the overall relocation of middleware, storage, computer rooms, and third-party dependent services, and the scale of the relocation was large.
The technician in charge of the migration also said: In the Guizhou computer room migration project, there were a large number of component upgrades. The Cloud Music server saved about 500 man-days through the construction of an automated upgrade platform, achieving an upgrade efficiency increase of about 83%.
If this had happened in the past, the price of filecoin would have risen long ago, but there has been no response until now.
In other words, the current encrypted distributed infrastructure can’t really help, and we can only watch for now.
When large-scale failures occur in more core financial network facilities, it may be more appropriate for encryption technology to come into play.
This has actually happened in some places:
Last month, Russia's banking system suffered a large-scale cyber attack, resulting in difficulties in withdrawing money from ATMs of many banks, and bank cards were blocked during transactions.
Iran's central bank and several of the country's banks were hit by a massive cyberattack last week and Wednesday, crippling large swathes of the country's banking system in what has been described as one of the largest-ever attacks on Iran's national infrastructure.