Social
media reports of the outage began surfacing in the morning, as users took to
the internet to complain about difficulties opening, syncing and uploading WPS
documents. Others said they experienced network latency when working on files.
The topic #WPSCollapse became the fifth trending term on microblogging site
Weibo.
At 3.33pm, Kingsoft announced on its Weibo account that WPS
service had “resumed after emergency repairs by engineers”, without elaborating
on the scope and reason for the breakdown. To placate users, the company is
offering everyone a free 15-day membership, to be claimed on Thursday.
The
outage is the second one in China this week that involved a major online
service. On Monday, NetEase Cloud Music, a music-streaming platform run by
video gaming giant NetEase, experienced a widespread service failure that
lasted over two hours. In the aftermath, the company gave users a free
seven-day subscription.
WPS Office claims a more than 90% in mainland China’s market
for mobile terminals. It is widely used in key sectors such as government
departments, financial institutions and telecommunications network operators.
As of June, WPS had 271 million monthly active users (MAUs)
on desktop and 328 million MAUs on smartphones, according to Kingsoft’s financial disclosure.
For
general users on the mainland, WPS has long been seen as a cheaper alternative
to Microsoft Office, although the commercial launch of the first WPS word
processor in 1989 predated Microsoft’s set-up of a China office in 1992.
Today, the WPS website still markets its products as being
“highly compatible” with Microsoft Word, Excel and PowerPoint.
However, WPS has previously been accused of censoring
private user documents. In 2022, a Chinese novelist said WPS locked her
out of her own work, with the software warning her that “the file may contain
sensitive content”.
At the time, WPS said it “never censors, locks or deletes
users’ local files”, but added that it “is obliged to review all content
distributed through its platform” in accordance with Chinese laws.
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