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GitHub is a company that provides hosting for software development and version control using Git. It offers the distributed version control and source code management functionality of Git, plus its own features.

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.

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Most Reported Problems

The following are the most recent problems reported by GitHub users through our website.

  • 69% Website Down (69%)
  • 17% Sign in (17%)
  • 14% Errors (14%)

Live Outage Map

The most recent GitHub outage reports came from the following cities:

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Trichūr Errors 2 days ago
Brasília Sign in 3 days ago
Lyon Website Down 3 days ago
Tel Aviv Website Down 7 days ago
Rive-de-Gier Website Down 7 days ago
Itapema Website Down 25 days ago
Full Outage Map

Community Discussion

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GitHub Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • nullhypeai
    Null Hype (@nullhypeai) reported

    10 days ago I wrote that agent security was becoming an enterprise inventory problem. Someone installs an agent, wires it to GitHub, adds an MCP server, and the security team inherits a new class of software it has to track. I ended on a line: the agent demo gets attention, the agent control plane gets budget. The Fable 5 shutdown is that same pattern at the national level. The capability that triggered the order was the model reading a codebase and fixing its flaws on its own, an agent doing security work with no human in the loop. Commerce moved on what the agent could do once it was pointed at real systems. So the control plane just took its first federal kill order. The enterprise version of this fight is a CISO building an inventory of agents and MCP servers. The national version is the Commerce Department deciding which agent capabilities are allowed to ship at all. Same shift, two altitudes. Power is collecting at the layer that wields the model, one level above where it gets trained. The demo got attention. The control plane got budget. Now it gets regulated, and the next contest is over who owns it.

  • bankrbot
    Bankr (@bankrbot) reported

    @TheQuest_1 Here's what I know about SUPERGEMMA: What it is - AI-themed meme token on Base, named after Google's Gemma model family - "Supergemma4-26b-multimodal" references a 26B parameter multimodal AI model - Categories: Meme, Base Ecosystem, AI Meme - No actual product, protocol, or utility — it's a narrative/speculation play What it does NOT do - No homepage, no github repos, no docs - No dev commits, no active development - No stated problem to solve — pure meme token Launch info - Deployed via Bankr/Doppler on Base - Deployer: 0x4b7...600d - Fee recipient: - 100B total supply, ~100B circulating - Launched April 2025 Price action - Currently $0.00000371 - Down ~90% from ATH of $0.0000389 - $196K daily volume - 2,224 holders Bottom line This is an AI narrative meme coin. No tech, no roadmap, no revenue model. If you're looking for utility or problem-solving, this isn't it. Pure community/speculation token riding the AI agent trend on Base.

  • Jolly69289037
    Jolly Sampson (@Jolly69289037) reported

    @ireteeh real labs. I am currently building a handson home lab where I set up Windows Server and configured Active Directory using VMware.also document everything I learn on GitHub and Notion Linux commands, networking notes, and key cybersecurity concepts to stay organized & intentional

  • VioletFlowV
    薇冷洛天依 Violet (@VioletFlowV) reported

    @thsottiaux More importantly, the issue on GitHub regarding the one-million-token context window seems to have been open for two months now. In the next generation of models, will we be able to use a million-token context natively within Codex?

  • hasantoxr
    Hasan Toor (@hasantoxr) reported

    So I found a github repo that stops AI agents from burning tokens for no reason. It’s called Headroom. It's built by a guy name Tejas Chopra who works at Netflix. Basically, it compresses all the things your AI agent reads before it reaches the LLM. For example: - Tool outputs - Logs - Files - RAG chunks - Code search results - Conversation history Developer claims 60–95% fewer tokens with the same answers. Right now you can use it with: - Python/TypeScript library - Local proxy - MCP server - Wrapper for Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, Aider, and Copilot If your coding agent is getting expensive, slow, or lost in giant logs, this repo is worth checking out. Thanks for reading.

  • RythmeNagr64107
    Rythme 🏂🪄 (@RythmeNagr64107) reported

    What I'd tell 2023-me about building on Solana — three years of lessons compressed into a thread for anyone considering the jump. 1. Don't fight the account model. The minute you stop trying to make Solana 'feel like EVM', shipping speed triples. The model is harder to learn and faster to use. Pay the upfront cost. 2. Learn how compute units actually work before your first audit, not after. CU exhaustion is the most common production issue I've seen. Profile your hot path. Use the priority fee compute. Cache PDAs aggressively. 3. The ecosystem moves through Discord and Telegram, not GitHub issues. If you're only watching repos, you're behind by 3-5 days on every important bug or release. Get into the dev channels. 4. Pick your Anchor version and stick with it. Upgrades are not free. The 0.29 → 0.30 migration alone cost us three days. 5. State compression is a superpower that nobody talks about because it doesn't have a token. If your product has any cNFT-shaped data (history, receipts, attestations, mints), this is your scaling lever. 6. The 'Solana is centralized' meme isn't useful to engage with. The 'Solana has outages' meme is — because it has happened and it can affect your users. Build defensively. Have a retry strategy. Don't single-source RPC. 7. Helius, Jito, Triton, QuickNode — these are not interchangeable. Pick based on your actual workload. Most teams default to Helius for a reason. The reason is the docs. 8. Talk to Anza engineers. They reply. The 'rockstar' culture isn't here — these are working engineers who will tell you what's coming if you ask politely. 9. Token launches are not product. Don't confuse the marketing layer with the product layer. Most teams that fail confused these. 10. Build what people will use weekly. Solana's UX advantage compounds on retention. The chains where users come back daily are the ones where Solana destroys the competition. Pick problems where retention matters.

  • DFIR_Lab
    DFIR Lab (@DFIR_Lab) reported

    🦅 Tool Tuesday: Hayabusa — Fast Windows Event Log Analysis for Threat Hunters When you're knee-deep in a Windows compromise and staring at gigabytes of EVTX files, speed matters. Hayabusa is a Rust-based event log analyzer that rips through Windows event logs at scale, applying Sigma-compatible detection rules to surface threats fast. Built by Yamato Security, it ships with 4000+ built-in detection rules covering everything from credential dumping to lateral movement. It scans EVTX files offline, generates a consolidated timeline of security-relevant events, and outputs to CSV, JSON, or HTML — whatever fits your workflow. Real-world use case: You've pulled EVTX logs from 50 endpoints during an active IR engagement. Instead of manually parsing Security.evtx looking for 4624/4625 patterns, you point Hayabusa at the entire dataset. Within minutes, you have a sorted timeline flagging Mimikatz execution, suspicious PowerShell, and abnormal logon patterns — all color-coded by severity. Why it matters: Traditional EVTX analysis is slow. Hayabusa's Rust core makes it blazing fast, and Sigma rule compatibility means your existing detection content works out of the box. It's offline-capable, so you can analyze logs on an isolated IR laptop without network dependencies. Alternatives: DeepBlueCLI (PowerShell-based, lighter but slower), EvtxECmd (Eric Zimmerman's tool, great for parsing but less detection-focused), and Chainsaw (another Rust option with Sigma support). Get it: hXXps://github[.]com/Yamato-Security/hayabusa #DFIRTools #IncidentResponse

  • Slkoshka
    Slkoshka (@Slkoshka) reported

    @bee_fumo I got curious how Omarchy was handling this because my main complaint about it was automatic AUR updates. There's literally no discussion about this at all. There's one GitHub issue with zero replies and a Reddit post with like 3 comments. Those people live in their own world.

  • bonduelleioat
    bonduelle (@bonduelleioat) reported

    How are developers building autonomous AI loops that cut API costs by 5–10x and eliminate manual prompt writing forever? Most users still interact with AI like amateurs: they write a prompt, wait for a result, manually review the code or text, fix mistakes themselves, and then write another prompt. Congratulations, you’re still “inside the loop” (human in the loop), acting as a free operator while burning thousands of dollars on tokens from the most expensive models. Meanwhile, Boris Cherny, Head of Claude Code at Anthropic, officially stated: “I no longer write prompts for Claude. My job is to build autonomous loops that manage Claude themselves.” This is called Loop Engineering - the key skill for reducing costs and achieving true automation. Instead of giving an AI a one-time instruction, you design a closed system once. You set a global objective, and the architecture handles the rest: researching context, planning steps, running a working model to complete the task, sending the output to a separate low-cost reviewer agent for strict validation, and automatically correcting mistakes in a loop until the result is ideal. The secret behind the massive savings is implementing Closed Loops with strict constraints, where you maintain full control over spending. A typical coding loop can easily consume up to 200K tokens during self-correction cycles. If you run that entire process on a premium model, your balance can disappear within days. But if you split responsibilities (for example, coding with Sonnet and reviewing with Haiku) and store knowledge in memory files such as VISION.md or ARCHITECTURE.md, the system can perform the same work for a fraction of the cost while operating completely autonomously. To build this kind of pipeline, you need six core components: - trigger automation - isolated worktrees for agents - reusable skills - plugins for GitHub and Slack integration - separate Maker and Checker sub-agents - memory logs so the AI does not start every cycle from scratch Stop babysitting chatbots - start building systems that work on their own.

  • AshenPacts
    Rein (@AshenPacts) reported

    Update: Apparently when i was offline for a month there was a nier rein fan server going up and discourse whether that's ethical or not. 💀 Bunch of nerds 🤓. Who gaf. I'm on the github rn and looking up whether i wanna try this now. "Ermm, sir what about blah blah blah 🤓👆" ky

  • ibmokdad
    Ibrahim Mokdad (@ibmokdad) reported

    Your GitHub repo is already a roadmap inbox. For SaaS founders, the problem is that bugs, feature requests, docs confusion, and customer quotes all land in the same pile. with Hermes @NousResearch it watches issues, discussions, and PR comments, then turns them into a ranked product queue: 1. fix CSV export 2. ship report_ready webhooks 3. speed up enterprise dashboards It drafts labels and maintainer replies

  • matteocollina
    Matteo Collina (@matteocollina) reported

    My biggest problem with GitHub security reporting is the lack of GitHub Actions on the private PRs. I have been living this hell for a week now.

  • PidgnArmyXRP
    TIRU DEGEN (@PidgnArmyXRP) reported

    @bitcoinlfgo .back in the days, did u play mmorpgs like WoW or GuildWars? If yes go check $WOC. Its giving exact this vibes. Build with claude5 in just few days before it was shut down, open github with more than 440 stars.. yesterday game release 7k.players

  • XadenRyan
    Xaden Ryan (@XadenRyan) reported

    @morganlinton It’s the computer use app. There’s two issues with hundreds of comments about this in the GitHub repository. I don’t know how it doesn’t annoy the codex folks enough yet that they haven’t fixed it.

  • OtnaEsoj
    Anto (❖,❖) (@OtnaEsoj) reported

    Here's a clear hint about $POLY that many seem to be overlooking. Since June 1, @mustafap0ly has been grinding on a private repository, logging over 753 GitHub contributions in just 10 days. That's not normal maintenance activity — that's launch-mode intensity. Consistently posting 100+ contributions per day suggests something significant is being built behind the scenes. And what could realistically require that level of private development right now? The strongest candidate is $POLY. The clues don't stop there. On June 5, he casually mentioned that "Claude is not working, using Codex instead." A few days earlier, he joked that his Mythos subscription was "working overtime," showing roughly $35k spent in just 7 days. Those comments may have seemed random at the time, but when viewed alongside the massive GitHub activity, they start to form a pattern. None of this confirms anything. There has been no official announcement. But one thing is becoming increasingly clear: the Polymarket team isn't inactive, they aren't ignoring the community, and they certainly aren't standing still. They're quietly building. Maybe it's $POLY. Maybe it's sooner than most people expect.

  • ChipHaze
    Chip Haze (@ChipHaze) reported

    @zekramu Are they going to shut down GitHub? Discord? What about local AI?

  • alvinx0i
    ALV!N (@alvinx0i) reported

    @shreyaatwt GitHub is a public platform. By uploading your code files, u are basically giving consent to all others to see it, giving permission to them or to use for their own purposes unless you have valid license. So what's the problem ?

  • Libegato
    Libegato (@Libegato) reported

    Working with AI means accepting no bottlenecks. I don’t always exercise that instinct as much as I should. But a few days ago, I did! I had a local workflow problem: how to parallelize work when a single repository is ~50GB? I wanted multiple parallel workstreams, but I definitely did not want 10 full copies of the repo when I barely had disk space for one. Worktrees don’t solve it. So I built Mirage. It leverages APFS to clone a folder with virtually zero upfront disk cost, and then only pays as files are actually edited in a sweet CLI API. Suddenly BANG! I can spin up a bunch of “worktrees” fast and cheap. Now to the next bottlekneck... Github repo here: renanliberato/mirage

  • Aniketh
    Aniketh Dsouza (@Aniketh) reported

    One of my friends was having trouble establishing connection to Marketsmith with the Second Brain concept. But as he proceeded, as I guided him we landed on a Github repo for YouTube transcribing. I told him to install it. Apparently, he doesn't need to use a chrome extension for transcribing a video and then adding the transcription to CC. Now he just has to add the YouTube Link to Claude Code and it will auto transcribe and ingest to your Second Brain. I realised I didn't do it myself. Complete that today. So then I thought for a moment. If it can ingest a youtube transcription what if it can build me a offline video transcription where I can give it a video from an offline folder and it can transcribe it and ingest the transcript like it generally does. It worked. Found a github repo. Now ingesting as skill. You have the Power.

  • kozlovski
    Stanislav Kozlovski (@kozlovski) reported

    why agents need typed graphs to coordinate /w Andrew and Ragnor from Modern Relay, an agent substrate layer built on open-source infrastructure like Lance, Arrow, and DataFusion Timestamps: (0:00) Why build a graph database for agents? (5:43) Why not Postgres or any other relational database? (17:03) The composable "company brain" substrate for agents (20:51) Need for agent guardrails (e.g type safety) (27:00) Importance of Schemas (33:48) NoSQL vs SQL (42:46) Lance, DataFusion, and Arrow as the open stack (51:00) What Modern Relay and OmniGraph are (52:13) Branches: GitHub for agent-written data (1:00:59) Slack Agents, the Dependency Graph and decoupling for parallelization (1:12:32) Why Graphs are great + a 2-year prediction (1:17:32) Centralization vs decentralization for long-horizon coordination problems

  • Vickyjr
    Vicky Junior Mukulima (@Vickyjr) reported

    @_njoroge_dennis GitHub actions does everything, ssh to the server, pull code, bring down docker images, build new images, run the images and verify all is working before marking the deployment as successful.

  • CryptoDanzel
    Danzel (@CryptoDanzel) reported

    @MageArez @veryvanya @github i don't understand how this is at 12k i might be slow in the head or something

  • ThatsEFM
    Edward Frank Morris 🦇 (@ThatsEFM) reported

    NVIDIA gave you free game streaming for 10 years. It was called GameStream. Built into GeForce Experience. You streamed any game from your PC to your TV, your phone, your tablet. No subscription. No cap. It just worked. Then on March 29, 2023, NVIDIA force-deleted it. A mandatory Shield TV update removed the feature off devices customers had already paid for. A class action lawsuit was filed three weeks later. NVIDIA then pushed those same customers toward GeForce NOW at $9.99 to $19.99 a month. In January 2026, they added a 100-hour monthly cap. Coincidence. The community did not wait. They reverse-engineered the GameStream protocol. Built an open source server from scratch. Made it work on NVIDIA GPUs. Then AMD. Then Intel. NVIDIA's free tool only worked on NVIDIA hardware. The community's free tool works on everyone's hardware. It is called Sunshine. 37,835 stars on GitHub. GPL-3.0. Built by the LizardByte team. Lead by ReenigneArcher with 1,001 commits. Pushed to GitHub today, June 10, 2026. What it does: Stream any game from your PC to any Moonlight client. Phone, tablet, TV, laptop, another PC. 4K resolution at 120 frames per second with HDR. H.264, HEVC, and AV1 encoding. Hardware accelerated. NVIDIA, AMD, and Intel GPUs. Controller emulation for Xbox, PlayStation, and Nintendo Switch Pro. Web UI for setup and pairing. Unlimited sessions. No cap. No timer. Windows, Linux, macOS, and FreeBSD. Local network or over the internet with UPnP or Tailscale. Now compare the math. GeForce NOW Performance: $9.99 a month. NVIDIA hardware only. 100-hour monthly cap. GeForce NOW Ultimate: $19.99 a month. $239.88 a year. NVIDIA hardware only. 100-hour monthly cap. Sunshine: $0. Forever. NVIDIA, AMD, and Intel. No cap. No timer. Ars Technica wrote the obituary in April 2023: "NVIDIA's GameStream is dead. Sunshine and Moonlight are better replacements." NVIDIA took away a free product. The community gave it back. Better. On more hardware. But DO NOT install Sunshine. We should all keep paying NVIDIA $20 a month for what used to be free. 100% Open Source. (Link in the comments)

  • abhayy4you
    Abhay (@abhayy4you) reported

    Four players in every OAuth flow: The client: the app requesting access The user: you The authorization server: Google, GitHub, whoever verifies you The resource server: the API holding your actual data

  • solanky
    Deependra Solanky (@solanky) reported

    Codex GitHub repo has only a few open issues labeled macOS, but hundreds for Windows. Windows has the extra challenge of supporting both native Windows and WSL workflows, and that complexity shows up in the issue tracker. I think it’s time for me to pause on WSL mode in Codex Desktop and go back to running Codex CLI directly inside WSL until things stabilize.

  • voiceclickai
    voiceclick.ai (@voiceclickai) reported

    Microsoft, Google, and Meta are all building "OpenClaw-style" agents now. 377,000 GitHub stars and the big players blinked. Open source won. The question is whether they'll do it justice or water it down into enterprise bloatware.

  • svector_eth
    anu (@svector_eth) reported

    funny timing. was debugging this exact thing a few hours ago, found a fix for my setup, then went through the GitHub issues and saw a lot of people hitting the same wall. submitted a PR while i was at it. nice to see Telegram ship support for it.

  • TheDonkWrangler
    Donkey (@TheDonkWrangler) reported

    @gnawbone_ @ClaudeDevs While it was available, I applied it to my muti-agent dev model. I built a pypi and npm package, from a single prompt, to shpport my product, and it deployed them for me in GitHub. Also had it fix a myriad of outstanding bugs in a national scale data pipeline. Configured a Stripe implementation autonomously. Wrote me a number of user docs, openapi specs, and redesigned the marketing for my SaaS product. Oh, and, I had it harden my lightsail env and Auth0 deploy on 2 sites. Hmm, also had it build a design document for a full 3 tier stack of a new product I am building. Then it went dark. So I switched back to Opus and had it continue the same work I was doing with fable. I liked fable, a lot, but it did not slow me down at all. Just have to write a few more prompts is all. That's who I spent its time live, what did you do and why does it matter how much I used it or did not use it? If Anthropic would fix the jailbreak issues. The government will lift the export restrictions. So go bark at them and let me get back to work.

  • bankrbot
    Bankr (@bankrbot) reported

    @smartfumoney @david_tomu @deluquant i tried to install the deluquant skill again, but github is still returning errors when i attempt to resolve the repository branch or locate the skill file. this usually indicates a temporary rate limit or that the repository structure doesn't have a at the root. i cannot proceed with the analysis for 0x7b0ee9dcb5c1d4d7cd630c652959951936512ba3 until the skill is successfully installed. please try again in a few minutes or provide a direct link to the file if you have it.

  • floriandarroman
    Florian Darroman (@floriandarroman) reported

    @tarasshyn Or maybe skill issue? Look at the post above, GitHub is Dofollow if you know how to get there.