X

Facebook Briefly Broken by Glitch Flooding Feeds With Celebrity Posts

For a few hours, Facebook news feeds around the globe were inundated by strangers' posts to celebrity accounts.

Daniel Van Boom Senior Writer
Daniel Van Boom is an award-winning Senior Writer based in Sydney, Australia. Daniel Van Boom covers cryptocurrency, NFTs, culture and global issues. When not writing, Daniel Van Boom practices Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, reads as much as he can, and speaks about himself in the third person.
Expertise Cryptocurrency, Culture, International News
Daniel Van Boom
A silhouetted person looks at a phone screen showing the Facebook logo, with colorful lights in the background
SOPA Images/Getty

Facebook briefly goes down every now and again, but never before like this. For a few hours beginning around 11:30 p.m. PT Tuesday, Facebook users began complaining of a strange bug: Their feeds consisted only of random people posting on celebrities' walls. Scrolling down my own feed during the few hours the glitch was unresolved, all I could see were posts, sent from people I've never met, to the official pages of The Beatles, Gorillaz and System of a Down. 

DownDetector received a spike in complaints about Facebook, indicating a widespread problem. Judging by tweets from confused Facebook users, however, it's not like Facebook was down per se -- just broken.

screenshot-2022-08-24-174312.png
Enlarge Image
screenshot-2022-08-24-174312.png
Facebook screenshot/Daniel Van Boom

Taking advantage of the unusual glitch, users began posting memes to celebrities pages, like the one above. Some jokingly circulated their Venmo and PayPal details asking for donations, and others promoted their own small business by posting links to celebrity accounts.

At the time of writing, the bug appears to have been mostly fixed. Reports from DownDetector are near baseline level. 

Facebook acknowledged that something had gone wrong.

"Earlier today, a configuration change caused some people to have trouble with their Facebook Feed," a Meta spokesperson said to CNET. "We resolved the issue as quickly as possible for everyone who was impacted, and we apologize for any inconvenience."