Telstra outages and service status in Tumbarumba, New South Wales
Problems detected
Users are reporting problems related to: phone, internet and total blackout.
- Telstra generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around Tumbarumba, including 0 direct reports.
Telstra offers mobile and landline communications services to the public and businesses, including mobile phone, mobile internet, and broadband internet.
Problems in the last 24 hours in Tumbarumba, New South Wales
The chart below shows the number of Telstra reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Tumbarumba, New South Wales and surrounding areas. An outage is declared when the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line.
July 13: Problems at Telstra
Telstra is having issues since 11:20 AM AEST. Are you also affected? Leave a message in the comments section!
Community Discussion
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Telstra Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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Econo ad absurdam (@econoadabsurdam) reportedif telstra suddenly became more valuable after it was sold off to be run by someone other than the government, and that keeps happening, then doesn't that mean that the government is very bad at running things
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Oz Owl (@Ispeek4me) reported@Bigly20 @Caitlen2310 The Guardian asks why hasn't the government acted on regulations since the Optus outage last year? I ask what did the Coalition do about regulations after the Telstra outages in 2016 & 2018? What private discussions and/or guarantees did they obtain from Telstra after those events? In 2018 Triple Zero calls dropped out across 5 states for 10 hours. If it were so simple why didn't the Coalition insist on Telstra installing back up systems? Maybe we need a Royal Commission (joke).
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David Taylor (@DaveTaylorNews) reportedSurely if there are no deaths from the Telstra outage it’s just luck. The issue is the ability to call emergency services, not whether that led to a fatality.
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NorvenMan ⚫️🔴⚫️ (@ManNorven2408) reported@crypto_cowes @ealesy05 So when OP or nevacular causes him to lose half his career for junk midfield minutes after already having stress fractures I’m happy to support the coaches club doctors and strength and conditioning team over the Telstra tracker especially how reliable Telstra has shown to be
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john ****** smith (@jfsmithcnt) reported@BigDog_USA @Telstra Fat yank piece of ****. Your opinion means nothing fatty.
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Captain Obvious (@uptothegame) reported@Telstra What a complete load of ****. No compensation. Just words. What a disgrace. You don’t care.
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Dane Trethowan (@grtdane) reported@RizviAbul Sale of Telstra wouldn't have made much difference, if its a software issue(may very well have been) then the problem remains wregardless of the owner. Perhaps what you mean is the Government should have held on to the networks the Telcos use.
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ClayChucky (@claychuckyclay) reported@Telstra Force them to allow roaming when they fail or dont give a service. #auspol
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Jokarman (@jok4r_) reported@Telstra So an apology but nothing to make up for the issues it caused?
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BeeYen (@BeeYenChan) reportedThe government’s big idea for fixing telco failures? Slap them with a $7.3 billion spectrum renewal tax — almost double what Telstra considered fair value — then threaten massive fines for triple-zero outages. Gartner analyst Khurram Shazad said it outright: this can do the opposite of strengthening resilience. Telcos are already stuck with stagnating revenue growth. These inflated spectrum fees just crush their margins harder. So they do the obvious thing under pressure. They stop spending on actual redundancy. No secondary backup power systems at base stations. No automated routing failovers. No diverse fibre backhaul paths. Capital expenditure gets deferred instead. The core network becomes brittle. One software glitch or timeserver ****-up and failures cascade into proper disasters. High spectrum costs simply extract the economic surplus from the sector. Networks look faster on paper because of the shiny new bands. In practice they are significantly less resilient when it actually matters. When the next outage hits and the “improved” networks fall over anyway, who gets the blame?