28 Jun 2009
Google has admitted that it thought the sudden spike in searches for Michael Jackson on Thursday was a massive, co-ordinated internet attack, leading it to post an error page on Google News.
R J Pittman, Google's director of product management, explained in a blog post that search volumes began to increase around 2pm PDT on Thursday and " skyrocketed" by 3pm, finally stabilising at around 8pm.
"The spike in searches related to Michael Jackson was so big that Google News initially mistook it for an automated attack," he wrote.
"As a result, for about 25 minutes yesterday, when some people searched Google News they saw a 'We're sorry' page before finding the articles they were looking for."
Many will be surprised that Google mistook a simple spike in traffic, albeit a huge one, for an automated attack. According to Pittman, last week also saw one of the largest mobile search spikes ever seen, with five of the top 20 searches about Jackson.
Google was not the only site caught out by the extraordinary events. The Los Angeles Times web site also crashed soon after it broke the news of Jackson's death.
Twitter's infamous 'Fail Whale' was also called into action when servers at the micro-blogging site crashed as 66,000 Tweets were made within a 60-minute period.
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