Like many of you out there in Internet land, I woke up Thursday morning to an interesting bug on my Facebook page. According to my own account, I had a lot to celebrate, as I’d apparently become friends with 226 people 46 years ago, on Dec. 31, 1969.

That, by the way, is just shy of two decades before I was born. I’ve been called an old soul before, but this seems ridiculous – especially given that Facebook itself is only 11 years old.

A Facebook spokeswoman said in a statement that the company has “identified this bug and the team’s fixing it now so everyone can ring in 2016 feeling young again.” So if you were having some sort of crisis over whether you and your friends could have been Facebook friends before Facebook even existed, that should be resolved soon.

But what gives? Facebook didn’t say, but the Internet has a pretty compelling theory: The problem has something to do with a little thing called “epoch time.”

That term refers to the way that systems with a Unix base, such as Macs and many servers, calculate time. The start of time, according to Unix, is midnight GMT on Jan. 1, 1970 – apparently a mostly arbitrary starting point – and these systems keep track of time by calculating the number of seconds that have elapsed since then. (Excluding leap seconds, in case you’re wondering.) When systems don’t have a time for something, they will sometimes reset to zero. That results in emails occasionally being sent from 1970 – or late 1969, depending on your time zone.

It seems that Facebook, for whatever reason, had a little timing mix-up when looking at which friend-a-versaries to commemorate Thursday. That prompted the weird notifications.

That said, you could celebrate with friends old and new in the spirit of 1969, which was a pretty monumental year. We did land on the moon, after all.


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