It went down at around 2239 GMT. I've not seen a hint on Twitter to suggest that it was a DDOS, though I guess that doesn't rule it out.
@timweber: "So yes, it doesn't look too good. both internal and external DNS are down, by the sounds of it."
Edit:
@richard_webber: "Not just DNS down for the BBC, they've been taken off the Internet completely, no routing to AS2818."
Yes, wondered about ddos first when posting this, but now seems more unlikely. They did a fairly big platform overhaul last week, but most of the site doesn't run on it yet, plus the news.bbc.co.uk servers don't and they are usually their most robust.
Nothing on BBC news channel yet mentioning it, which you'd think there would be if was foul play.
"How on earth does [the submarine commander] know if the PM has been killed and the normal chain of command obliterated? For obvious reasons, no one we spoke to would elaborate on the precise protocols. Suffice it to say that there is a complicated series of checks that the submarine commander must perform to establish the true situation—one of which, curiously, is to determine whether Radio 4 is still broadcasting."
I can’t resolve www.bbc.co.uk using any of the four name servers (ns1.thls.bbc.co.uk, ns1.bbc.co.uk, ns1.rbsov.bbc.co.uk and ns1.thdo.bbc.co.uk). The last IP address Netcraft saw was 212.58.246.90, which I also can’t access, but they definitely have DNS problems.
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[ 3.3 ms ] story [ 47.3 ms ] thread@timweber: "So yes, it doesn't look too good. both internal and external DNS are down, by the sounds of it." Edit: @richard_webber: "Not just DNS down for the BBC, they've been taken off the Internet completely, no routing to AS2818."
23:26:01 <+GeeDee> cr0.ixnlon#sh ip bgp 132.185.132.21
23:26:01 <+GeeDee> % Network not in table
EDIT: 132.185.0.0/16 has gone again. (actually it's a bit less than a /16 but I don't feel like looking it up)
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1090400/HMS-Apocalyp...
"How on earth does [the submarine commander] know if the PM has been killed and the normal chain of command obliterated? For obvious reasons, no one we spoke to would elaborate on the precise protocols. Suffice it to say that there is a complicated series of checks that the submarine commander must perform to establish the true situation—one of which, curiously, is to determine whether Radio 4 is still broadcasting."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ga_rCnueID8
Been down for a while now; no official Tweets from any of the official BBC Twitter accounts it seems.
Edit: It's backup now. Was done for about 1 hour and 20 minutes.