Likewise Slack, which we use instead of Teams, is not going to be an easy thing to simulate down time. And when you consider we use all of the above, then simulating down time is really not going to be easy. I really agree, there's so much redundancy across the world. I should add, all I really NEED to do is find a way to simulate an outage. If you meant outage.just too bad.wait it out then seek legal advise for compensation. ![]() So what do you mean Google goes down ? It can literally be a too big to fail. Data in GCP ( Opens a new window or Opens a new window) Mobile phone OS (your phone likely not go down but some services like Google Play or search may be affected if "Google goes down") Google Workspace (gmail, chat, google drive, google docs etc) ![]() ![]() I would agree with Kenny8416as the term "Google" is too widely.but Slack could just mean the messenger ? If not, then you'll have to update the local hosts files on endpoints to point the domains to a bad address to simulate the failure. ![]() If you've got centralised Malware (AV) policies, then you could block those services thereģ. If you've got centralised DNS for remote users (something like Cisco Umbrella), then you can block those services thereĢ. Not quite sure what you're asking, or what you're using google / slack for, or what the aims of the test would be, but if you're asking how to simulate those cloud services being offline, then you're really going to have to look atġ.
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