Microsoft said late Tuesday that it had resolved problems that had caused a significant outage affecting its MSN Messenger service worldwide.
A company representative declined to elaborate on the nature of the problem,  or the steps Microsoft took in fixing it. In an earlier statement, the  representative said the outage was caused by an "isolated issue that we've  located in the data center."
The problem had affected a "significant" number of MSN Messenger users  intermittently since Monday afternoon, the representative said. The latest outage comes days after security monitors discovered the Bropia worm was using MSN Messenger  to spread. The Microsoft spokeswoman denied the outage was caused by the  worm. Last October, a glitch crippled many MSN Messenger users  around the world. In March of last year, MSN suffered a couple of outages over a weeklong  period. Some speculated that one of the blackouts was caused by sign-in problems  from its Passport service. Microsoft denied Passport experienced any problems  during the down period. Instant messaging has become one of the most popular services among Internet  users, and it's gaining more traction among businesses. Popularized by America  Online's AOL Instant Messenger, millions of Internet users now have an IM client  loaded on their PC desktop. While AOL, Microsoft and Yahoo account for most of these users, the three  networks remain proprietary. Many consumers have more than one IM client running  on their screen to chat with various contacts on different services. All three  companies have stated their intention one day to interoperate, but results have  yet to be seen.
 

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