Another dark day for BlackBerry users

BlackBerry maker Research in Motion (RIM) paid rival Nokia 50 million euros to settle a patent dispute, the Financial Times reported.

BlackBerry maker Research in Motion (RIM) paid rival Nokia 50 million euros to settle a patent dispute, the Financial Times reported.

Published Oct 11, 2011

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BlackBerry users across Europe, the Middle East and Africa were hit with service disruptions to their smartphones for a second day after an unexplained glitch cut off Internet and messaging services for large numbers of users around the world.

Research in Motion Ltd., which makes BlackBerry devices, said on Tuesday morning that services were operating normally and the issue responsible for delays in subscriber services a day earlier had been resolved. But Blackberry's popular messaging service was not fully operational in Europe, with users reporting issues sending and receiving messages.

In Britain, Vodafone UK told customers via Twitter that service was not fully restored. T-Mobile UK blamed “a European-wide outage on the BlackBerry network” which it said was affecting all mobile operators.

Etisalat, in the United Arab Emirates, apologized for “the further interruption” to Blackberry services, “once again due to RIM problems.”

Kenya's Safaricom Ltd. said on Twitter that its Blackberry customers were experiencing a “technical fault” and apologized for any inconvenience.

Angry smartphone users also used Twitter to vent frustration with the company and bemoan the loss of their messaging capabilities, questioning why the company took so long to restore services.

A spokeswoman for BlackBerry said she was not immediately able to comment. – Sapa-AP

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