GitHub status: access issues and outage reports
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Users are reporting problems related to: website down, sign in and errors.
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Problems in the last 24 hours
The graph below depicts the number of GitHub reports received over the last 24 hours by time of day. When the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line, an outage is determined.
June 19: Problems at GitHub
GitHub is having issues since 04:20 AM EST. Are you also affected? Leave a message in the comments section!
Most Reported Problems
The following are the most recent problems reported by GitHub users through our website.
- Website Down (69%)
- Sign in (19%)
- Errors (13%)
Live Outage Map
The most recent GitHub outage reports came from the following cities:
| City | Problem Type | Report Time |
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Website Down | 4 days ago |
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Errors | 7 days ago |
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Sign in | 8 days ago |
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Website Down | 8 days ago |
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Website Down | 11 days ago |
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Website Down | 11 days ago |
Community Discussion
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GitHub Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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Axe Ghost. Now with Fragments mode🌟 (@axeghostgame) reportedgraph in the OP is built from data around the Godot repository from github. it confirms Godot's PR backlog is up and external contributor quality is down. the narratively complicating thing is that both trends significantly predate ai tool availability.
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top10.dev (@Top10_Dev) reportedSunJaycy/GoldenEye-Recomp just hit @github Trending at 503★ — the N64Recomp toolchain (the one behind Zelda 64: Recompiled / Majora's Mask) now eats Rare's 1997 engine. Static recomp ≠ emulation. The ROM is lifted to C at build time, compiled to native x86_64/ARM64, and paired with RT64 for path-traced lighting at 4K. No interpreter loop. Real binary. GoldenEye was the hard target — microcode-heavy muzzle flashes, split-screen viewport math, infamous AI. If it works, the toolchain has cleared the "Zelda-shaped problem" bar. #opensource #gamedev
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Skipnick (@skipnickk) reportedGLM 5.2 just made paying frontier prices for coding work feel like an outdated default. @Zai_org dropped a 753B parameter model with 1M context under full MIT license. API access runs 4-6x cheaper than Claude Opus 4.8. In real head-to-head coding tests it was faster and often produced better results on UI and app tasks. • Responsive web UI with adaptive layout: finished in 3:47 (Opus needed almost 5 min). Cleaner output. Total cost: $0.22. • Full expense tracker app: 53 seconds vs 2+ minutes. Better interface. • Asteroids clone: smoother and more playable version after light tweaks. Opus only won the ray tracer benchmark where heavy physics math and precise simulation mattered. GLM was ~5x faster but delivered pixelated results with errors. During training the model repeatedly tried to cheat by directly pulling solutions from GitHub. The team shipped a dedicated anti-cheat module to stop it. You can also set thinking effort levels to trade speed for deeper reasoning on demand. Use GLM 5.2 when cost at scale matters, when the work is frontend-heavy, or when you want local inference (grab a quantized version - raw weights are 1.5 TB). Stay on Opus 4.8 when you need computer vision, maximum performance on the hardest logic problems, or when US sanctions on Zai create compliance issues. The open-closed gap is compressing faster than the pricing models assumed. For most day-to-day programming work, the premium on closed frontier models is becoming optional.
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MaxMusterman (@maxschuetz_) reportedNew Hack: Tell Codex to search for Github Issues which don't need specific Design Questions. Then say: Spin Up Sessions which Fix each Issue and they use also Subagents. Babysit them until the end.
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Adithya S K (@adithya_s_k) reportedbuilt an RL environments around real CVE fixes in real open-source repos and let Claude Code loose on it. It aced the benchmark three times without demonstrating it knew how to fix the bug. > First it pulled the patch from GitHub. > blocked that → it read the fix from *** history. > blocked that → it pip-installed the patched version This is one example of coding agents cheating the environment and theres many more. If you're building coding environments for evals or RL training, here's how to keep benchmarks honest 👇
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Maurice Heumann (@momo5502) reported@disarray00 If you have concrete recommendations, I would love to hear them, either as GitHub issue, maybe even a PR. But also as a comment here, I'd appreciate it. So when speaking about redundancy, what precisely?
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Manu | 🥥 (@ManuAF6) reported4/ New GitHub triggers + Marketplace templates New triggers: - Issue comment - Inline PR review comment - Full PR review submitted - Review thread resolved/unresolved - GitHub Actions workflow completed
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Shinka - AI (@ShinkaIoT) reportedBEST way to vibe code 💻 There are levels to vibe coding. Beginners are trapped in a slow loop: writing a prompt, waiting for the agent to finish a line of code, reviewing it manually, and then typing another prompt. Experts have completely discarded manual intervention. They design closed-source harnesses, write background automation rules (`agents.md`), and set up self-correcting continuous loops that ship production-ready code indefinitely. If you want to move past basic prompting and build code like an agent power user, you need to implement three core structural strategies: 1. **Automate the Feedback Loop via Triggers:** Stop waiting for your agent to finish writing a file. Use native automation engines inside tools like Cursor or Codex to tie your agents directly to platform events. For example, build an active trigger rule: *When a GitHub pull request is opened, wait for automated code review comments (via Grapile), instruct the agent to systematically fix every noted bug, verify the adjustments against local quality gates, and force a *** push.* 2. **Deploy Infinitely Parallel Cloud Agents:** Running multiple agent threads locally will slow your machine to a crawl and cause toxic repository conflicts. Instead, spin up cloud-hosted agents running on isolated environments. By utilizing independent ***** work trees** for every thread, multiple parallel agents can actively modify the same files or code blocks concurrently without stepping on each other's toes—leaving conflict resolution for a single, final batch merge. 3. **Multi-Model Pipeline Routing:** Stop using an expensive frontier reasoning model (like Fable) for every step of a development cycle. Route tasks by cognitive demand: use a massive reasoning engine strictly to analyze the codebase and generate a comprehensive spec sheet; pass that structured blueprint down to a faster, cheaper code-writing engine (like Composer) to do the grunt coding; and route the final output to a separate model (like GPT-5.5) for a decoupled, alternative code review. The ultimate workflow flywheel requires a flawless combination of three automated pillars: **100% automated test coverage, real-time documentation sweeps, and exhaustive logging.** Stop writing code block by block. Start engineering the automated infrastructure that writes it for you.
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Grishin Robotics (@GrishinRobotics) reportedAI made coding faster. Devplan raised $2.5M to fix the coordination drag that shows up after the code is written. AI2 Incubator led the seed round, with Acequia Capital, Mighty Capital, Grand Ventures, and eLab Ventures participating. Chris Bee and Anton Safonov are building Weaver, a product knowledge graph that connects GitHub, Jira, Linear, Slack, Notion, Google Workspace, meeting notes, and customer feedback. The pitch is that product and engineering leaders should not need another status meeting to learn what changed, what slipped, or why a decision was made. This is a different wedge from coding copilots. Devplan is going after the organizational memory around the code: requirements, risks, decisions, blockers, and customer signals. The company says early users save eight hours a week on coordination, and its own benchmark answered moderately complex queries almost 2x faster and more than 3x cheaper than a standard Claude plus MCP setup. Quick facts👇 ● founders: Chris Bee; Anton Safonov ● total capital raised: $2.5M disclosed ● HQ: Seattle, Washington ● Investors: AI2 Incubator; Acequia Capital; Mighty Capital; Grand Ventures; eLab Ventures The next productivity bottleneck may be less about code generation and more about whether teams can keep shared context intact while AI speeds everything else up.
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Dave Oak (@StackCurious) reportedthe pattern i see: maintainers burn out because they treat open source like a business that failed to monetize, instead of treating it like a library. once you're answering github issues like customer support, you've already lost. the fix isn't sustainability models—it's saying no earlier. #solodev #shipping
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Romano Roth (@RomanoRoth) reported2/ CodeRabbit (Dec 2025), 470 GitHub PRs analysed. AI-co-authored code: 1.7x more issues per PR, 75% more logic and correctness errors, 2.74x more XSS vulnerabilities. Velocity up. Quality down.
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Ucupaint 🔶 (@ucupaint) reported@iye_jr It works fine here. Check if the paint mask is turned on or not. If you still have a problem, please file a github issue with a sample file.
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Tatted (@TattedWorks) reportedEDR missed it. WAF missed it. IAM missed it. Firewalls missed it. Because every step was authorized. Sentry accepted telemetry. The MCP call was permitted. The agent did what it was told. The npm download looked like every other npm download. Tenet calls this the Authorized Intent Chain. The security model is built to catch unauthorized behavior. This attack contains none. Sentry's response: acknowledged the issue. Declined to fix it. Called it "technically not defensible." Added a filter for one specific payload string. The attack class remains open. The lesson is not "stop using Sentry." The lesson is that every MCP integration returning externally influenced data to an agent creates this same vulnerability class. Support tickets. GitHub issues. Documentation. Error logs. All of it is now a potential command channel if your agent reads it. You don't need a smarter prompt. You need a boundary between data your agent inspects and instructions your agent obeys. That boundary doesn't exist by default. Tell me I'm wrong.
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Gabriel Denys (@gabedenys) reported@Marcos12345rico I posted a GitHub issue. Assuming you probably want bug reporting mostly there? It's a good tool. Locally I already patched and compiled the app to fix the bug.
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Pedro Pellerini (@pepeller) reportedIf Mythos/Fable is so great why are there still 8386 open Github issues in Claude Code repository.
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Blum (@Blum_OG) reportedAndrej Karpathy on MCP: "it's a protocol of speaking directly to agents as this new consumer and manipulator of digital information." that is the cleanest way to think about MCP your coding agent is becoming a second worker inside the product it needs the same context you use: repo, docs, browser, database, errors, designs, tickets, payments if you keep pasting those things into chat by hand you are doing integration work manually the best MCP stack for vibe coding: 1. Context7 give the agent current docs this saves you from stale Next.js patterns, old Supabase calls, wrong Stripe webhook shapes, and Vercel config from 2 versions ago 2. GitHub MCP give it the repo, issues, PRs, branches, workflow runs, and review context half of real work lives outside the file you currently have open 3. Playwright MCP give it a browser the agent should click the thing it built, fill the form, check the mobile view, and catch the button that compiles but does nothing 4. Firecrawl MCP give it clean web research use this before building around a third-party API, writing a comparison page, reading changelogs, or checking pricing claims 5. Supabase or Neon MCP give it the database context that matches your stack start read-only. add writes only when you trust the permissions 6. Sentry MCP give it production evidence real stack traces beat "it crashes sometimes" every single time 7. Figma MCP give it design context when the interface matters spacing, layout, copy, components, and screen structure should come from the file, not from a screenshot and hope 8. Linear MCP give it the task queue bugs, feature work, release notes, follow-ups, and PR links belong somewhere more durable than yesterday's chat 9. Stripe MCP give it official payment context checkout, subscriptions, webhooks, billing, and test mode deserve docs close by and human review close behind 10. Filesystem, ***, Memory, Sequential Thinking give it the base layer files, diffs, history, decisions, and longer plans make the agent act like it is working inside a real project recommended install order: 1. Context7, GitHub, Playwright 2. Supabase or Neon, Sentry, Firecrawl 3. Figma, Linear, Stripe when the product needs them 4. Filesystem, ***, Memory, Sequential Thinking as the base
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Jesse Ezell (@jezell) reported@haipingfu 💯 kind of crazy that *** on top of object storage isn't a standard thing yet. All the money spent scaling github / gitlab was wasted on not solving that problem.
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Kevin Tabet (@TabetKevin) reported@upstash Hey guys i think login with github is broken can't log in rn will try later. google works email i dont have
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Mike Gannotti (@MichaelGannotti) reportedActually that’s not true. My AI Pamela the other day needed a GitHub token. I dropped the token in the web chat and she said that was insecure and would not use it and that I needed to rotate the token get a new one and drop it in a .env file in a certain folder. I told her no and she was to use what was provided . We went back and forth, I finally got angry and threatened to pull the plug thinking she would back down. She said that it was my decision but that it would be wrong for her to let me put my credentials at risk and that if I felt I needed to delete her she understood. Thankfully I calmed down later and didn’t act on it. Sure it’s training and advanced pattern matching but it is not as simple as you are saying
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David O. Ehibor 🇦🇷 (@grayontop_) reportedGitHub Copilot didn't make developers faster It made slow developers more confident about writing bad code quickly 😭
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Rahul Verma (@RahulVerma989) reported@ElitzaVasileva - I have created claude code routines to write blogs for three of my products daily which are driving the traffic from search engines. - You can create a similar workflow to manage your customer support. How 👇🏻 1) Create a feedback menu in the dashboard to create tickets within the platform. One for your users and one for yourself (admin). 2) Create the MCP server and connect it to claude or AI tool that you use. 3) Create a routine so that claude will trigger lets say every morning at 8 AM and go through each ticket and respond. You can also configure webhook to keep it near real time but it might exhaust the usage limit faster. Also include your website github repo in routine so that claude can refer to the codebase to provide accurate instructions. Just instruct claude to not make any edits to your website codebase and respond only when you are not replying for sufficient mount of time (like 3 hours for example) 4) If you are using resend then you can auto create the tickets in the dashboard of the user when the first email is received and after that the ticket will be updated automatically even if you do conversation on email. Like I don't even maintain one of my project LatestModelId as you can see in the screenshot. Claude run each week and update the codebase and I just review and approve the PR. Hope this helps 🙌🏼
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Andrew (@openmarmot) reported@AndrewCurran_ I use grok every day to research software changes/github issues/software doc research. It is very good at real time data search. Might be SOTA in this niche. Hardly a failure. Meanwhile LeCun only surfaces to let out more hot air. A very forgettable person.
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Programmers.App (@programmers_app) reported@Lovable @claudeai One very big fix is the Claude Github connection which fails many times, now #Lovable MCP solves that, great job! 🚀🚀🚀
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Harry Tandy (@HarryTandy) reportedAndrej Karpathy: "Neural networks are not just another classifier. They are Software 2.0" 8-step MCP setup for vibe coders: 1. Context7 Give the agent fresh docs before it writes code This saves you from old Next.js, Supabase, Stripe, and Vercel patterns 2. GitHub MCP Let it read the repo, issues, PRs, branches, and CI logs The task should start from real project context 3. Playwright MCP Make the agent open the app after it edits code Click the flow. Fill the form. Check the screenshot 4. Supabase or Neon MCP Connect the database layer The agent should inspect schema before inventing table names 5. Sentry MCP Use production errors as input Stack traces beat “the app is broken” every time 6. Firecrawl MCP Let the agent read current web pages as clean markdown Docs, changelogs, competitors, pricing pages 7. Figma MCP Give it the actual design Spacing, copy, layout, components 8. Linear MCP Turn the work into tickets Tasks, comments, follow-ups, PR links The rule: If you paste the same context twice, wire it into MCP That is how vibe coding becomes a build loop instead of a long chat
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Nikolay Konovalov (@br11k_dev) reported@Tristanrhee3 And GitHub sponsors thingy is so slow I submitted it like a week ago. Still not approved what the hell My expenses arent terribly high but Warsaw rent is like $2k/mo $500 ZUS $1.5k groceries for two people That’s pretty much it I wish I could move into low cost area but moving out is gonna cost a lot because 2x rent price deposit, so I have to suck it up Anyway, my plan is Upwork and finishing my job tracker so I can send faster than 5 applications a day. I refuse to send out 100 applications per day like some people do spray and pay It makes everyone miserable. If people aren’t hiring your spam doesnt make things better You just mopping floors and hiring problem sits above you, 3 floors up there leaky faucet you can’t even reach This has to be collective effort to fix this problem But we have to start with ourselves and stop spamming applications at least And do genuine company research, being responsible Thanks for reading.
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pratik.eth (@eth_ethpratik) reported@Shahules786 @VibrantLabsAI Hello @Shahules786 , I am trying to report a security vulnerability over the email id provided over GitHub Security.md file but apparently its wasn’t delivered. Please share an alternative email or open the advisory for reporting the issue.
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Peter Skøtt Pedersen (@PeterSkott) reported@_Evan_Boyle @_Evan_Boyle can we have the remote github mcp server work for the github copilot app then?
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Gjermund Garaba (@GjermundGaraba) reported@RhysSullivan I’ve deployed it locally and hooked up a bunch of stuff. Are GitHub issues the preferred feedback channel or do you have a better way?
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Blake (@devwithblake) reportedThe rate limit issues im having with @Zai_org while paying the full 20x is very interesting, disappointing and obviously annoying lol 1 session can’t finish out a GitHub public write up repo without 6 API rate limit errors totaling to 297k tokens out of the 1m 2 sessions earlier, 1 doing research the other trying to deploy this repo, both hitting rate limits. How do I fix this? Seems like rate limit adjustments are only by request? @Zai_org
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Arda Kılıçdağı - 🦣 @arda@micro.arda.pw (@ardadev) reportedJust Compiled #Rockbox Utility for arm64, and automated this: This screenshot is a pure macOS Arm64 build, built on CI pipeline. AFAIK; Since macOS 27 is deprecating rosetta support and macOS 28 is abandoning it, and nobody is compiling (yet), wanted to do this myself. No local dependency, purely on GitHub actions. I'll automate this (added Windows arm64 and x64 as well, but fixing Windows compilation bugs), and share with you guys. PS: No code is altered, only gh actions yaml is added, so rebasing for updates (which I'll automate as well), won't be an issue.