Business McDonald's Closes Amid Global IT Outage

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By Aliss Higham
Published Mar 15, 2024 at 3:55 AM EDT Updated Mar 15, 2024 at 8:17 AM EDT

McDonald's restaurants across the world have been forced to temporarily close, and other branches around the world have reported a widespread technological issue which means customers cannot pay for food.

Internal systems in Australian restaurants were offline since about 3:10 p.m. local time, according to a report by News.com.au.

IT issues have also been reported online in China including Hong Kong, Japan, Canada, South Korea, Taiwan and Germany.

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The American fast food company, McDonalds logo is displayed outside one of its stores on January 09, 2024 in Stoke-on-Trent, United Kingdom. Technology issues have been reported in several countries across the world. GETTY

What We Know​

A spokesperson from McDonald's U.S. told Newsweek: "We are aware of a technology outage, which impacted our restaurants; the issue is now being resolved. We thank customers for their patience and apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused. Notably, the issue is not related to a cybersecurity event."

In Australia, internal systems at some restaurants have been offline since about 3:10 p.m. local time. Some stores have been forced to close completely, while others are only taking cash orders, according to a report by news.com.au.

Posting on X, formerly Twitter, McDonalds Japan said there has been a "system failure," and that the company apologizes "for any inconvenience this may cause and ask that you please wait for a while until the service is restored." It does not give the reason for why the outage has occurred.

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[Notice]
We are currently experiencing a system failure. We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause and ask that you please wait for a while until the service is restored.
— McDonald (@McDonaldsJapan) March 15, 2024
Tweet (Archive)

A McDonald's employee in New Zealand told the New Zealand Herald that a computer server crash meant they couldn't take any orders or serve any food, with screens used to take orders currently not working.

New Zealand based X user Germin van Royen said: "The Mcdonalds outage is crazy. Went in tonight and drive thru + all kiosks were down. A system that can fail nation wide is bad but across multiple countries too!? Bonkers."

Customers in Hong Kong have been able to purchase food, but cannot use mobile and self-ordering kiosks, according to a Facebook post on Friday. It says the outage is down to a "computer system failure."

"Please order directly at the restaurant counter," the statement continues.

McDonald's Taiwan has issued a similar statement, saying its "24hr Happy Delivery" and telephone ordering has been temporarily suspended due to the system undergoing maintenance.

Social media users in the U.K. have said they have been unable to order food, but this has not been confirmed by McDonald's U.K. According to data from the Downdetector website, U.K.-based users of the McDonald's app began reporting trouble with orders this morning at around 5:30 a.m. local time.

According to a statement issued by McDonald's, and reported by British newspaper The Telegraph at 6:50 a.m. ET, the issue affecting the U.K. and Ireland has now been resolved.

Other problems from the U.S., Canada and the Netherlands have been reported by Reddit users. Issues in Germany have also been reported by X users.

Update 03/15/24, 7:45 a.m. ET: This article has been updated to indicate that the issue has been resolved in the U.K. and Ireland, according to a McDonald's statement.

Source (Archive)
 
Truly sad, with the advances of tech, a simple glitch can knock out a fast food giant. I need my burgers bro!
 
This has been an issue for a few weeks. I was in a (UK) maccies two weeks ago when the touch-screens stopped working and no payments could be processed.

They had to open the only till they had because that still worked.

I hope Mcdonalds lose billions because they invested in touch-screen bullshit, prioritised Ubereats over walk-ins and hired 100% pajeet workforce to run the restaurants. Bonus; The average wait-time to get an order is 20 minutes because pajeets can't put burgers in a bag properly.

Not that i'll eat there again because the food tasted like paki-hands.
 
My boy Bobby Tables placed his order and crashed the place!
Closer to reality than you would think. Bobby Tables is used in some live fire test cases in the industry, so wouldn't be surprised some errant QA person fucked MickeyD's shit up.

But their teams working on the checkout/payments API are basically a herd of pajeets and a few highly-paid US consultants. Make of that what you will.
 
Closer to reality than you would think. Bobby Tables is used in some live fire test cases in the industry, so wouldn't be surprised some errant QA person fucked MickeyD's shit up.

But their teams working on the checkout/payments API are basically a herd of pajeets and a few highly-paid US consultants. Make of that what you will.
I believe that's called Boeing Syndrome.
 
Imagine a world where a mechanical till adds up your shop and this weird shit called cash can be used. Wild eh?
 
A McDonald's employee in New Zealand told the New Zealand Herald that a computer server crash meant they couldn't take any orders or serve any food, with screens used to take orders currently not working.
Remember when they just had the little punchy buttons?
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Bet you those never went down because some Pajeet spilled cow dung on the servers...

The gay robot future sucks.
 
Imagine a world where a mechanical till adds up your shop and this weird shit called cash can be used. Wild eh?
I've handed cash at several places where employees look very intimidated/confused on what to do.
The POS even calculates the change for them but they slowly handle it as if I just handed them a bomb and they are trying to figure out which wire to cut.
I've also helped people give me my own change. Which is really bad because a less honest person could easily fuck a business up that way.
 
Imagine a world where a mechanical till adds up your shop and this weird shit called cash can be used. Wild eh?
Don't even have to go that far - Its not like your terminals and shit need to be fully IoT devices. You don't need live service patches for a fucking touch screen terminal, nor do you even want that. Outside the immediate issues right now, shipping out update USB's means that if something goes fucky in the new one, you can stick the old one back in and roll back over, instead of waiting who knows how long for someone to roll out a hotfix.

IoT is cancer, software as a service is cancer, gap your fucking devices so that pajeets shitting the bed in Visual Studio don't take down your entire business. Its not hard.
 
I've handed cash at several places where employees look very intimidated/confused on what to do.
It is bizarre. My first retail job had a till like the old fashioned ones, you know where the little number tiles pop up out of the top? It gave you the total but not the change, you had to work that out yourself.
IoT and getting rid of cash will be disastrous
 
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