On the off-chance this isn't sarcasm, Facebook's routing shenanigans slowed down the entire internet. Not to mention that they're a publicly traded company, and one which has gone out of its way to assume an infrastructure role. They don't have a right to privacy here, and we are all owed an explanation.
I don't want an explanation nor do I care, Facebook could disappear tomorrow like all the other networks before it and it wouldn't make a dent in my day.
Whether we like it or not, all three platforms are relied upon by hundreds of millions of people and businesses everyday for communication.
I'm sure the world would quickly adapt by re-adopting these things called "websites" and "email" but in the meantime, it's highly self-centered to think this "didn't matter".
> Facebook's routing shenanigans slowed down the entire internet
This is Hacker News, so the distinction between network performance, server performance and application performance should matter.
"The Internet" did not slow down. "The Internet" infact probably had more available capacity as a result of Facebook's outage, as all those bits of outrage and cats ceased to be transferred for the duration.
Some applications may have seen performance hits, as a result of poorly thought out dependencies on an external service without graceful failure.
Some applications may have seen increased load and suffered due to server resourcing constraints, caused by applications like the above failing to fail gracefully, and instead polling more aggressively.
> They don't have a right to privacy here, and we are all owed an explanation
Morally / ethically, you're right. The fact that Facebook exists in it's current form tells me that morals and ethics aren't particularly important to the real world.
Perhaps you're unaware that billions of devices attempting to resolve Facebook's unresolvable domains effectively DDOS-ed the DNS system? It most certainly did slow down big chunks of internet which otherwise had nothing to do with Facebook.
> Some applications may have seen increased load and suffered due to server resourcing constraints, caused by applications like the above failing to fail gracefully, and instead polling more aggressively.
I had Cloudflare's woes in mind when I wrote that.
Based on cloudflare's own blog[0], 1% of queries went unanswered for about 10 mins, and were significantly delayed for a few hours. 5% of queries were delayed for a couple of hours. 95% of queries continued to be resolved as normal.
This is referring explicitly to users of 1.1.1.1, which is likely not the same infrastructure as domains hosted by cloudflare dns.