Microsoft Outlook bug blocks email logins, causes app crashes

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Outlook

Microsoft is investigating an Outlook bug causing desktop app crashes, high system resource usage, and preventing users from logging into their accounts.

While the company said these ongoing issues only affect European customers, users worldwide have since reported experiencing the same sign-in and app instability problems.

"We're investigating an issue in which users in Europe may be experiencing crashing, not receiving emails or observing high memory usage when using the Outlook client," the company said.

"We're analyzing data from customers experiencing crashes and high memory usage when using the New Outlook desktop app. We're reviewing service telemetry and reproducing the issue internally to develop a mitigation plan."

According to some reports, the same problems also impact Outlook on the web (OWA), with the app freezing and not loading for some users in the United States and elsewhere.

Affected Outlook (new) customers have also seen the app displaying alerts that advise them to restart the system because of high memory consumption.

Outlook restart alertOutlook restart alert (glim69)

​In an incident report added to the admin center (tracked as MO907654), the company also said that these ongoing issues may be blocking users from logging into other Microsoft 365 services.

"Were analyzing service telemetry, specifically networking data and authentication specific to the Netherlands, and further investigating potential impact to other Microsoft 365 services," Redmond said.

The company also tweeted via its official Microsoft 365 Status Twitter account that it identified a potential memory management issue that may be responsible for this outage.

"We're obtaining memory dumps and logs from Outlook client telemetry data for analysis to determine our next steps," it said.

In August, Microsoft mitigated an Azure outage that took down multiple services for customers across North and Latin America for more than two hours.

This is a developing story...

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